Swanny Note: This will be a bleak Christmas for most of us. I hope we are sacrificing enough so that our Government is PLEASED. After all, we have been asked for endless sacrifice.....and "they" have been receiving the gifts od OUR sacrifice. I think of it everytime I need to see a doctor and can't. I am not one of those that wants universal healthcare. I just want affordable healthcare. The Government gets their healthcare paid for for the rest of their lives.
WASHINGTON
(AP) — Like a ticking time bomb, the national debt is an explosion
waiting to happen. It’s expanding by about $1.4 billion a day — or
nearly $1 million a minute.
What’s that mean to you?
It means almost $30,000 in debt for each man, woman, child and infant in the United States.
Even if you’ve escaped the recent housing and credit crunches
and are coping with rising fuel prices, you may still be headed for
economic misery, along with the rest of the country. That’s because the
government is fast straining resources needed to meet interest payments
on the national debt, which stands at a mind-numbing $9.13 trillion.
And like homeowners who took out adjustable-rate mortgages,
the government faces the prospect of seeing this debt — now at
relatively low interest rates — rolling over to higher rates,
multiplying the financial pain.
So long as somebody is willing to keep loaning the U.S. government money, the debt is largely out of sight, out of mind.
But the interest payments keep compounding, and could in time
squeeze out most other government spending — leading to sharply higher
taxes or a cut in basic services like Social Security and other
government benefit programs. Or all of the above.
A major economic slowdown, as some economists suggest may be looming, could hasten the day of reckoning.
Some economists liken the government’s plight to consumers who
spent like there was no tomorrow — only to find themselves maxed out on
credit cards and having a hard time keeping up with rising interest
payments.
“The government is in the same predicament as the average
homeowner who took out an adjustable mortgage,” said Stanley Collender,
a former congressional budget analyst and now managing director at
Qorvis Communications, a business consulting firm.
Much of the recent borrowing has been accomplished through the
selling of shorter-term Treasury bills. If these loans roll over to
higher rates, interest payments on the national debt could soar.
Furthermore, the decline of the dollar against other major currencies
is making Treasury securities less attractive to foreigners — even if
they remain one of the world’s safest investments.
“The first day the Chinese or the Japanese or the Saudis say,
‘we’ve bought enough of your paper,’ then the debt — whatever level it
is at that point — becomes unmanageable,” said Collender.
A recent comment by a Chinese lawmaker suggesting the country
should buy more euros instead of dollars helped send the Dow Jones
plunging more than 300 points.
The dollar is down about 35 percent since the end of 2001 against a basket of major currencies.
Foreign governments and investors now hold some $2.23 trillion
— or about 44 percent — of all publicly held U.S. debt. That’s up 9.5
percent from a year earlier.
Japan is first with $586 billion, followed by China ($400
billion) and Britain ($244 billion). Saudi Arabia and other
oil-exporting countries account for $123 billion, according to the
Treasury.
“Borrowing hundreds of billions of dollars from China and OPEC
puts not only our future economy, but also our national security, at
risk. It is critical that we ensure that countries that control our
debt do not control our future,” said Sen. George Voinovich of Ohio, a
Republican budget hawk.
Polls show people don’t like the idea of saddling future
generations with debt, but proposing to pay down the national debt
itself doesn’t move the needle much.
“People have a tendency to put some of these longer term
problems out of their minds because they’re so pressed with more
imminent worries, such as wages and jobs and income inequality,” said
pollster Andrew Kohut of the nonpartisan Pew Research Center.
Texas billionaire Ross Perot made paying down the national
debt a central element of his quixotic third-party presidential bid in
1992. The national debt then stood at $4 trillion and Perot displayed
charts showing it would soar to $8 trillion by 2007 if left unchecked.
He was about a trillion low.
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