"The indebtedness of the US to the public
Via Reuters’ prolific columnist John Kemp, comes this grim reminder of the size of US public debt (emphasis ours):
The chart shows the scale of US federal government debt held by the public as a percentage of GDP since 1939 — with forecasts for the fiscal years 2009-2019 based on the Congressional Budget Office (CBO)’s analysis of the president’s budget proposals.
The cost of the bank rescue plan and fiscal stimulus makes the banking crisis the largest peacetime disaster to overtake the federal budget in the recorded history of the United States. Only the two world wars and war among the states have caused a larger deterioration in the fiscal position and build up of public indebtedness.
Federal debt is set to surge from 37.1% of GDP in 2007 (the last pre-crisis year) to 56.8% in fiscal 2009, the highest level since 1954.
Moreover, federal debt will continue rising thereafter — unless the president and Congress enact further tax rises or spending cuts beyond those already announced. The federal debt is projected to hit 71.4% by 2013 and peak at 79.9% of GDP in 2018.
Without further tax rises or spending cuts, the federal debt will reach levels not seen since 1949 and not much lower than during the 1941-1945 wartime emergency.
Related links:
“The OECD forecasts a jump in US public debt of almost 40 per cent…” - Martin Wolf, FT
US debt puts strain on dollar - FT"
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