US Government Debt Crisis?
- Jia Han
- Apr 8
- 2 min read
Several weeks ago, I wrote about the US Government debt and deficit [1]. I was quite concerned at that time. The US government debt is growing at an alarming rate. So far the government debt is funded by international bond holders. But this cannot go on forever because of the rate of increase. Soon or later this will come to an end.
The Republican winning the election and reports that the new administration would pay attention to debt and deficit makes this less urgent. Hopefully, it will adopt pro-growth policies and cut some expenses. The best scenario is that the twin effort will keep the total debt in check (as a percentage of GDP). Mohamed El-Erian quoted in the previous writeup outlined this scenario. Larry Fink also advocates a similar approach [2].
Since my last writeup, I came across a video, Why Your Money Is Losing Value [3]. It is easy to understand. I highly recommend it.
The motivation for me to write the earlier write-up is to warn you. The worst case could be a lot worse than the GFC because the debt is much bigger and the US dollar is the reserved currency. If you watched [3], you would know that money is guaranteed by the government. If the government does not have the resources to guarantee it, then people will lose faith in money. What would happen if that occurs? If there is some dislocation and/or fault lines, then a major crisis would occur. Otherwise, slowly and firmly the interests will rise. This will allow governments all over the world to devalue currencies. As an aside, Niall Ferguson recently proposed the so-called “Ferguson Law” [6]. (It was a good talk.) If an empire spends more on debt payment than defence, then it will not last long. I think that he tries to warn too much debt.
What should you do now? As said above, this would be rather urgent if the Democrat retains power. The Republican is more fiscal conservative. However, it is unclear what they will do. So I would say wait and see.
Some relevant information. First, Warren Buffett has sold shares and sits on a huge amount of cash. It could signal a few things: 1) the stock market is overvalued, 2) he senses some financial stress (we do not know but he pays attention to that), 3) tax consideration (Harris proposed tax change). Second, interests are unlikely to remain low. If you can fix a long term rate, you might do so. Third, keep a certain amount of cash.
References:
Larry Fink 11-5 How to Grow Out of America's Debt Woes - WSJ
Why Your Money Is Losing Value (11-15)
Is Democracy Doomed? | Robert Menzies Institute Oration (11-2024) (Niall Ferguson)
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