America’s gross national debt
exceeded $31 trillion for the first time on October 4. This happened as interest rates on the debt
will be going up and as the US may be sliding into recession. The debt has grown due to huge government
spending during the Covid pandemic and to Trump tax cuts. Until recently the Administration and
Congress were spending like there was no tomorrow, and the Fed was cooperating
with them by keeping interest rates historically low. Low interest rates led to assertions that deficits
and debts did not matter. At higher
interest rates, they may matter.
If the Fed gets interest rates
back down to 2%, paying interest on the debt may not be too bac, but if
inflation remains at 4% or higher, debt payments will be an increasing burden
on paying for other government programs, such as defense or Social Security. Some programs will have to be cut in order to
pay additional interest on the debt. Otherwise
the debt grows bigger.
An article in the Economist said that unless Congress and the Administration work with the Fed
by limiting spending, monetary policy (the Fed) eventually loses traction. Higher interest rates become inflationary,
not disinflationary, because they simply lead governments to borrow more to pay
rising debt-service costs, i.e., the Fed has
no way to fight inflation alone.
In the last few years the US has gone on a massive spending
spree. We may now have to pay for
it. We can pay by instituting some sort
of austerity, or we can just get on the inflation bandwagon and ride it into
the future.
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