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US debt rises to $33 trillion as government shutdown looms

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US debt rises to $33 trillion as government shutdown looms​


Analysis by Nicole Goodkind, CNN
Published 7:58 AM EDT, Wed September 20, 2023



The U.S. Capitol Building is seen in Washington, U.S., August 15, 2023.

The U.S. Capitol Building is seen in Washington, U.S., August 15, 2023.
Kevin Wurm/Reuters


As the US national debt passes $33 trillion and a government shutdown looms, Wall Street feels defensive.

That shutdown could sour sentiment and deal a blow to an economy already dealing with high gas prices, autoworker strikes and elevated inflation — with some saying it could even increase the possibility of a recession.

Fitch sent Congress a wakeup call after the debt limit fight earlier this summer. The ratings agency downgraded US sovereign debt from AAA to AA+ in August, citing the nation’s mounting debt and partisan brinkmanship as the major reasons behind its decision.

But the government hit snooze.

What’s happening: The gross national debt has grown at an alarming pace since then — by $1 trillion in the last three months alone.
Political finger pointing around what caused the accelerated debt accrual, meanwhile, has left the government at an impasse around the budget.

The budget deficit — the difference between what the government spends and what it takes in — reached $1.5 trillion for the first 11 months of the fiscal year, an increase of 61% since last year.

The recent increase in interest rates has already made it much more expensive for the government to pay back what it owes. And a shuttered government, without a plan for how to pay down its debt, would make the problem worse.

“As we have seen with recent growth in inflation and interest rates, the cost of debt can mount suddenly and rapidly,” said Michael Peterson, CEO of the Peter G. Peterson foundation, a bipartisan group that advocates for fiscal responsibility. “With more than $10 trillion of interest costs over the next decade, this compounding fiscal cycle will only continue to do damage to our kids and grandkids,” he said.

Republicans say federal spending programs championed by the Biden administration are too expensive, and Democrats say GOP-backed tax cuts have squashed revenue.

September 30 marks the end of the fiscal year, and lawmakers will have to finalize a 2024 budget deal by October 1 to avoid a government shutdown. But not one of the 12 appropriation bills required to fund the government has passed through Congress yet, making it unlikely that a plan will be passed by the deadline.

The threat of a shutdown comes as the US economy is already feeling the pressure of inflation, interest rate hikes and a high deficit, UAW strikes, renewed student debt payments and rising gas prices, said Gary Schlossberg and Jennifer Timmerman at the Wells Fargo Investment Institute.

Each of those things, they said “weighs on housing, consumer finances and government financing expenses in adding to recession risks during the closing months of the year.”

Why it matters: A government shutdown would stop most government agency activities and services and require all non-essential government personnel to take unpaid leave. Analysts at EY estimate that there are about 800,000 non-emergency federal workers with an average salary of $95,000 each.

The extent of the damage comes down to how long a potential shutdown lasts.

Each week of a government shutdown, estimated Gregory Daco, EY chief economist, and his team, would cost the US economy $6 billion and shave GDP growth by 0.1 percentage points in the fourth quarter of 2023.

The shutdown would also lead to a delay in economic data, said Daco, “creating a potential headache for economists and policymakers trying to assess the economy’s health.”
Shutdowns over the past 30 years have lasted between a few days and over a month, but Schlossberg and Timmerman believe that given the “hardened positions in an increasingly polarized Congress,” this one has the potential to last a few weeks.

The event, they say, could be “yet another catalyst that could spark increased volatility and extended weakness in stocks, given the underlying vulnerabilities we see in the broader economy.” Investors should prepare a defensive portfolio, they added, “positioning for an economy approaching an anticipated recession.”

What to expect from Wednesday’s Fed decision

The Federal Reserve is expected to hold its benchmark lending rate steady on Wednesday as it waits for more data to understand how previous rate hikes are affecting the US economy, reports my colleague Bryan Mena.

The central bank raised rates to a 22-year high in July.

At the conclusion of its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday, the Fed is also set to release a fresh set of economic projections that will likely reflect stronger economic growth and slightly lower unemployment this year, compared with previous estimates.

Officials’ new economic projections will likely show at least one more rate hike this year. There seems to be a consensus among Fed officials that holding rates steady this month is the right move — but some policymakers have said the Fed could raise rates again after September.

Investors will be looking for clues that the Fed is done hiking rates, but Fed Chair Jerome Powell will likely stress in his post-meeting news conference that inflation remains unacceptably high. That would leave the door open for another rate increase, which could come when the following meeting concludes, on November 1. Financial markets currently see a 69% chance the Fed will continue to pause rate increases in November, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.

 
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January 2022:

...

The size of China’s debt problem is truly staggering. At last measure, debt of all sorts – public and private and in all sectors of the economy — amounted to the equivalent of $51.9 trillion, almost three times the size of China’s economy as measured by the country’s gross domestic product. This is the highest level recorded in the 27 years since Beijing first began to track such statistics. Matters seem set only to get worse. According to the Beijing-backed National Institution for Finance and Development, local authorities are set to issue new debt next year of some 4 trillion yuan, the equivalent of $570 billion.


China’s debt overhang far exceeds the burdens facing the United States. As recently as 2020, total debt in the United States relative to GDP exceeded China’s. But as of mid-2022, China’s relative debt burden stood 40 percent higher than America’s. If this comparison does not highlight China’s precarious situation, it is worth considering that more developed countries, such as the United States, tend, because of their greater relative wealth, to have higher relative debt burdens and can support them more easily than less developed economies, such as China’s.


...

And then, this happens:
1695365837218.png



NO DATA.


This is a practical way to solve a problem.
 
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They can reduce the debt level a bit is by:

1. Repudiating all debt owed to PRC and Chinese corporates/citizens.
2. Expropriating all Chinese assets they can lay their hands on and using it to pay off some debt.

Regards
 
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Debt is not the main problem, the problem is how fast it is rising compared to their income and rising interest rates. Remember, the new debt is taken at much higher interest rates.
US is already paying more than $2 billion per day in interest. This fiscal they have already paid $808 billion in interest payments.

US_Debt_Interest.png


Since the debt ceiling was raised in June, they have added another 3 trillion in debt. Almost at a rate of 1 trillion per month.
At this rate they will reach $50 trillion debt much before 2030.
Since the new debt is at a much higher rate, they are also paying interests much more in coming years.


Problem for US fed is that, their income is getting less, but their expenses are getting more.

US fed revenue is $3.97 trillion ⬇️ 10%
US fed expense is $5.49 trillion ⬆️ 3%
Revenue deficit is $1.52 trillion ⬆️ 61%

And since the time of posting this news article, US debt has risen by another $100 billion.

PS, their interest cost on debt is more than their defense spending o_O
 
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