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Politics

It's Not What You Owe, It's Who You Owe

Brian Doherty | 2.3.2012 4:13 PM

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Both are important, of course, but this Yahoo! Finance account of who holds U.S. debt is still interesting:

About 40 percent is held by public entities, including parts of the government. Here's who owns the most. Foreign countries listed include private and public investors, according to monthly U.S. Treasury data.

1. Federal Reserve and Intragovernmental Holdings

U.S. debt holdings: $6.328 trillion

That's right, the biggest single holder of U.S. government debt is inside the United States and includes the Federal Reserve system and other intragovernmental holdings. Of this number, The Fed's system of banks owns approximately $1.65 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities (as of January 2012), while other U.S. intragovernmental holdings - which include large funds such as the Medicare Trust Fund and the Social Security Trust Fund - hold the rest.  

In the monthly Treasury bulletin, both are combined into one category and the total accounts for a stunning $6.328 trillion in holdings as of September 2011 (the most recent number available). The amount is an all-time high as the Federal Reserve continues to expand its balance sheet, partially to purchase U.S. government debt securities….

Presidential candidate Ron Paul has introduced a bill to cancel that debt owed to Fed. Back to the top 10 debt-holders….

2. China

U.S. debt holdings: $1.132 trillion

The largest foreign holder of U.S. Treasury securities, China currently has $1.132 trillion in American debt, although it is down from all time highs of $1.173 trillion in July 2011. …

3. Other Investors/Savings Bonds

U.S. debt holdings $1.107 trillion

With the most recent numbers from June 2011, this extremely diverse group includes individuals, government-sponsored enterprises, brokers and dealers, bank personal trusts, estates, savings bonds, corporate and noncorporate businesses for a total of $1.107 trillion….

4. Japan

U.S. debt holdings: $1.038 trillion….

5. Pension Funds

U.S. debt holdings: $842.2 billion

Pension funds control large amounts of money, reserved for personal retirements, and thus are obligated to make relatively safe investments. This group, which includes private and local government pension funds, holds $842.2 billion in U.S. debt. The private pension fund category also includes U.S. Treasury securities held by the Federal Employees Retirement System Thrift Savings Plan G Fund.

6. Mutual Funds

U.S. debt holdings: $653.5 billion

According to the Federal Reserve, mutual funds hold the sixth-largest amount of U.S. debt compared to any other group, although mutual fund holdings have diminished by more than $105 billion since December 2008….

7. State and Local Governments

U.S. debt holdings: $484.4 billion

U.S. state and local governments have nearly a half-trillion dollars invested in American debt, according to the Federal Reserve. The level of investment has remained stable since 2006, moving within the range of $484 billion and $576 billion….

8. The United Kingdom

U.S. debt holdings: $429.4 billion

The U.K. currently holds $429.4 billion in U.S. debt, but the country's investment has fluctuated dramatically during the past two years. Now at its all-time high (and rapidly increasing), British holdings were as low as $55 billion in June 2008.

9. Depository Institutions

U.S. debt holdings: $284.5 billion

As of June 2011 (the most recent numbers available), the Federal Reserve Board of Governors lists depository institutions as holding about $284.5 billion in U.S. debt.

This group includes commercial banks, savings banks and credit unions. In 2011, its holdings more than tripled from the 2008 low of $105 billion….

10. Insurance Companies

U.S. debt holdings: $250.1 billion

According to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, insurance companies hold $250.1 billion in Treasury securities. This group includes property-casualty and life insurance firms.

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Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason and author of Ron Paul's Revolution: The Man and the Movement He Inspired (Broadside Books).

PoliticsWorldEconomicsPolicyNational DebtJapanGovernment SpendingChinaDebt
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  1. shrike   14 years ago

    Ron Paul's bill to cancel the debt the Fed owns is interesting. If it can be done once then why not repeatedly? And why not introduce a bill to cancel foreign debt?

    The dollar has Holy Currency Status because games like that are not played.

    1. CrackertyAssCracker   14 years ago

      Not Holy to us man. Just you.

      1. shrike   14 years ago

        And the market. Goldbugs may bitch about it but the US Dollar is the most coveted currency in the world.

        (Gold is an asset and not a currency)

        1. Jeffersonian   14 years ago

          Behold, the tallest man in Lilliput!

    2. Joshua Corning   14 years ago

      If it can be done once then why not repeatedly?

      Cuz it would weaken the power of the FED.

      You, like all left wing statists, don't want that to happen...once or a thousand times.

      It is also pretty easy to point out that keeping the dollar at your "holy currency status" is destroying the US economy.

      10% unemployment, no recovery until 2018, 6 million less jobs since Obama elected, CBO says what?

    3. Tulpa   14 years ago

      If you cancel the SSTF's debt holdings you'd have a disaster on your hands.

  2. Xenocles   14 years ago

    A bill to cancel debt is arguably unconstitutional on 14th Amendment grounds.

  3. R C Dean   14 years ago

    Intragovernmental holdings could be cancelled with absolutely no effect on anything that I can see.

    Now, debt held by the Fed is interesting. First, its interesting that it is thrown in with "other intragovernmental holdings", when I thought the Fed was independent and not a government agency.

    Leaving that aside, debt held by the Fed is debt that has been monetized. The Fed printed money to take that debt off the market. I'm not sure what effect on the broader world cancelling that debt would have.

    1. pmains   14 years ago

      According to the NYT:

      The Fed is required by law to turn over its profits to the Treasury each year, a highly lucrative byproduct of the central bank's continuing campaign to stimulate economic growth.

      If they can force them to hand over profits, why not treasuries?

    2. Tulpa   14 years ago

      Intragovernmental holdings could be cancelled with absolutely no effect on anything that I can see.

      Emptying the SS and Medicare trust funds would be a pretty big effect.

      1. CE   14 years ago

        Not when the "trust funds" have to be paid back through new taxes either way.

  4. Joshua Corning   14 years ago

    FYI

    Federal Reserve and Intragovernmental Holdings = future tax payers

  5. Xenocles   14 years ago

    Besides, it's not what you owe, it's who you blow.

  6. Troll   14 years ago

    "the Fed's system of banks".

    Can someone explain this to me? The Fed has banks?

    Also FWIW, I always suspected the Fed bailed out the banks because it needs them to buy their debt.

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