
Looking ahead to the November elections, one headline that is bound to surface is the national debt. According to the Peterson Foundation, the U.S. debt figure will pass $40 trillion by November, and is now growing by roughly a trillion dollars every five months. Last month, the Congressional Budget Office estimated that this year’s balance sheet alone will bleed red to the tune of $1.9 trillion. Under current law, the annual debt increase will come to $3.1 trillion in 2036.
Interest payments represent the fastest-growing ‘government program’ in the federal budget. Over the first three months of the current year, the government will have paid $270 billion in interest on its debt, which is a higher number than the nation’s defense spending for the same period. And if one adds in other long-term government obligations like the promises to make Social Security payments and cover health costs through Medicare, the true fiscal gap exceeds $100 trillion.
There are two implications to this. The first is that whatever party is in power after the elections will be in a no-win situation; the only way out of the fiscal mess is to cut government expenses (meaning programs) and, at the same time, raise taxes. That would almost certainly result in a recessionary period as the markets and economy adjusts to awful-tasting medicine.
The other is that the combination of a recession and reduced government spending can lead to a downward spiral. The government’s normal process for reducing the impact of a recession is to ramp up spending—obviously not an ideal solution when the goal is to reduce the debt. And, of course, a recession often entails lower tax collections, since there are fewer profits and often less wages to tax. That might further exacerbate the debt situation, just in time for a new President to inherit an awful mess with no obvious solution.
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