This is what it looks like when a country is heading toward a financial precipice. Scary, right? Each color shows $1T getting added to the national debt.
Not that long ago, it took six years to add a bar. We’re now adding one every 90-120 days. The explosion of debt has been the only bipartisan phenomenon. It’s both parties, all presidents, and every Congress. They can’t stop!
The acceleration started under George W. Bush. Bush went into 2002 with less than $6T of debt. Thanks to GWOT military spending and tax cuts we probably couldn’t afford, $6T grew to $7T in 23 months, $8T in another 21 months, and $9T in 23 months.
Then the Great Recession hit. We added the next trillion in 13 months, crossing $10T for the first time in American history. And we haven’t looked back since.
During the second Obama term, with spending reined in by the Tea Party movement, annual deficits reduced to less than $1T, and growth in the debt slowed down. At the end of Obama’s tenure, it took nearly 20 months to go from $19T to $20T. That would be the last time it took a full year to add a trillion dollars to the debt. Wow!
In 2017, a real-estate developer got inaugurated as president. And, if there’s one thing we all know—and love!—about real-estate investors, it’s that they understand the value of leverage.
Under Trump, even as the economy surged, deficits grew, and national debt once again spiraled. We ended 2019 with a little over $24T in debt.
Then Covid hit, along with consumer stimulus, PPP loans, massive government spending, and reduced tax receipts. Over just two months in 2020—April and May—we added $2T to the national debt. Ever since, we’ve been adding $1T every 160 or so days.
With Biden in the White House and a narrowly divided Congress, we’re now adding $1T to the debt every three to four months. It took just 91 days to go from $32T to $33T. 104 days to get to $34T.
And it’s not slowing down. Biden has another 300+ days in office this term. When he or Trump enters their second respective term in office in 2025, the debt will likely be above $37T.
Where does it end? As deficits continue to pile up and borrowing costs remain relatively high compared to where they were over the previous 20 years, how is any of this sustainable?
It’s time to keep opting out to Bitcoin!
Will they add 10T in a year before or after 2030?
reply
I'll take before, but the trend puts it pretty close to 2030.
reply
Mmmm, the black 8 ball says yes.
reply
It won't end, it will only increase from here. US should try to understand that unnecessarily involving into the affairs of others is going to cast its economy into a blackhole of Debt. As they say, “When one burns one’s bridges, what a very nice fire it makes.”
reply
National debt in over $100,000 per person. Just nuts!
reply
I must tell you that if it wasn't for the popularity of Dollar globally, The United States would have already collapsed. But it's on the way with so many countries now cutting their ties with dollar and 'dedollarisation' has been gaining momentum recently.
reply
Boom! Great points, thanks!
reply
reply
Says those next to the fire hose (money printer)
reply
The people close to the money printer are the ones that lit the room on fire, the dog is all the people that are still holding their fiat bags.
reply
And I know lots of them and I trying to hand then the view to Bitcoin!
reply
We are headed for disaster, more debt, more inflation, probably stagflation, with the speed at which the debt is going, it is estimated that the US debt will be at 46T by 2028, and after that what will come? Bitcoin is our solution, they know it, we know it.
reply
Yup gradually then suddenly, so glad I found Bitcoin in 2021, though I found it at the top at the time like most do/will. And learned and stacked ever since. I don’t see another viable option out of the mess.
reply
My friend, you found out in time, if everything collapses, what will be the value of the fiat money you spent on Bitcoin in 2021? nothing at all, then the only thing that will matter is how much Bitcoin you got, and for sure, a lot more than the majority of the population who still remain ignorant.
reply
Yup we all get in at the price(s) we deserve!
reply
I think there is a soft-war going on between the Fed and Congress....I know its usually viewed that they act in concert (and they usually do), however I think the dynamic has shifted recently.
Powell has trying to sheepishly raise rates....hoping to suck up excess liquidity, but more importantly...trying to induce congress to control spending.
He has now wound up in very bad situation: The govt is simply refusing to back down on spending, thus any increase in interest rates perversely increases inflation as it prompts the gov to issue more bonds to pay every higher interest on debt. Once you get to the point that raising interest rates no longer controls monetary expansion, you are really off the rails....
If Powell has balls, he would continue to raise rates even in the face of the continued bond issuance, knowing that eventually the bond sales will start to fail. At some point the market will stop accepting 5% yield and bond sales will be repriced for 10-15% yield.
Will that even stop spending tho? Does anyone believe that any political figure could "cut the federal workforce by 50%"? That would be tens of millions of job cuts.....
reply
Perfect, you nailed it here. Thanks!
reply
Cutting 10 percent seems impossible.
Government spending moves in one direction.
reply
This chart is so mind boggling 🤯
How is it possible to accelerate money printer so much without it to heat-up?
reply
Um clown world clearly!
reply
Absolutely! It's fucking insane how it gets through people's eyes and nobody cares 🤯
Sometimes I really doubt whether we're as intelligent as we claim to be...
reply
BUBBLECONOMICS
reply
The doom is coming! Gotta pay the bill
reply
It’s better to examine total spending because it is the root cause of deficit or debt
reply
Good point!
reply
I wonder what the Keynesian economists say about these figures.
reply
They are scrambling to find what page this is on in their textbook.
reply
My question is who’s dumb enough to loan the U.S. money and expect to be paid back.
reply