The Debt Crisis Is Getting Real
Rising bond yields mean the national debt is going to be a lot more expensive in the next few years, and we just keep adding to it.

Writing at Vox in June 2016, liberal commentator Matt Yglesias argued that low-interest rates meant governments were practically obligated to borrow more and run bigger deficits.
"The right course of action is really pretty obvious: If the international financial community wants to lend money this cheaply, governments should borrow money and put it to good use," he wrote.
"Good use" could mean different things to different political factions, he acknowledged. Yglesias favored more infrastructure spending, but he also suggested that taking on more debt could be used to finance a broad-based tax cut. The specifics might differ from place to place, but as long as there was cheap money to be had on the international bond markets, loading up on debt was a means to a positive end. "While it lasts everyone could be enjoying a better life instead of pointless austerity," he concluded.
I don't point this out to pick on Yglesias. He was—as he often has throughout a successful and productive career—serving as a sort of avatar for the liberal political consensus on an important issue. With deficits falling and interest rates at all-time lows, borrowing seemed to make both fiscal and monetary sense on the political left—which was frustrated by the political constraints (that's what Yglesias meant by "pointless austerity") Republicans had placed on then-President Barack Obama's second term. Sure, the economy was doing pretty great in the mid-2010s, but cheap borrowing meant it could be doing even better.
Conservatives didn't share this rhetorical perspective in 2016, but soon enough they would reveal that they more-or-less agreed. On the campaign trail, Donald Trump promised, unbelievably, to pay off the entire national debt within eight years. Once in office, however, he set about adding to it—with the gleeful agreement of Republicans in Congress, who hiked spending, cut taxes, and let additional borrowing fill the gap. During Trump's four years in office, the national debt grew by nearly $8 trillion, and you can only blame the COVID-19 pandemic's emergency spending for about the last $3 trillion of that total.
"One of the reasons I do feel comfortable with us spending all this money is because interest rates are very low," then–Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin said in 2020. "And we're taking advantage of long-term rates."
A year later, President Joe Biden took over and cranked the spending spigot open even wider, requiring even more borrowing.
When Yglesias wrote that column for Vox in 2016, the federal government owed about $19 trillion. Today, it owes more than $33 trillion, and we just added another $2 trillion in a fiscal year with no major national emergencies.
In short, the federal government followed Yglesias' advice. But it might be more accurate to say it went along with what was clearly a bipartisan consensus formed in the mid-2010s: that borrowing was cheap, debt was easy to afford, and deficit spending allowed everyone to enjoy "a better life" with none of the downsides of austerity.
Unfortunately, the downsides have arrived.
The yields on U.S. Treasury bonds are now hitting levels not seen in decades. The 10-year Treasury bond is nearing 5 percent, while the 20-year bond has already crossed that threshold—and some analysts expect higher yields to be coming, CNBC reported Tuesday.
Why does that matter? "We took out a mortgage thinking we'd be paying 2%, but now we're paying 5%," Marc Goldwein, director of policy at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) wrote on X (formerly known as Twitter) on Tuesday.
Unlike most mortgages, which have fixed interest rates, much of the U.S. government's debt is tied up in short-term bonds which periodically "roll over" into new bonds with updated interest rates. As a result, higher interest rates mean higher interest payments—and those funds come directly out of the federal budget, leaving less revenue for everything else the government might aspire to do, whether funding welfare programs or buying more fighter jets.
"That debt, borrowed at low rates, is now being rolled over into Treasuries paying interest rates between 4.5 and 5.6 percent," the CRFB explained last month. "Though borrowing seemed cheap during those periods, policymakers failed to account for rollover risk, and we are now facing the cost."
Interest payments on the debt will be the fastest-growing part of the federal budget over the next three decades, according to the Congressional Budget Office's (CBO) projections. In the shorter term, interest payments are set to triple by 2033, when they will cost an estimated $1.4 trillion—a total that will only grow higher if more unplanned borrowing takes place before then, or if interest rates rise higher than the CBO expects.
That's a huge bill for future taxpayers, and it's one that won't get them anything for their money in 2033. It's simply paying for the things the government did in the past.
Among other things, the CBO warns that paying for all that debt will "slow economic growth" and "elevate the risk of a fiscal crisis."
In other words, all that borrowing didn't ensure that people could enjoy "a better life." It meant that things could be temporarily better, but that the bill would eventually come due. As it always does.
There was available evidence that rampant borrowing would not be costless—and even that growing deficits might push interest rates higher, creating the exact mess in which we now find ourselves. In a 2014 paper, the CBO economist warned that higher debt loads, even when borrowed at low-interest rates, would result in "lower [economic] output and lower national saving lead to a lower standard of living." Another CBO working paper published in 2019 found that every one-percentage-point increase in debt as a share of gross domestic product (GDP) would add more than two points to interest rates.
Those potential consequences were ignored by the political class.
Two months after Ygelsias argued for more borrowing in Vox, Paul Krugman made essentially the same point in The New York Times, writing that "these are the best of times for the world's most ravenous borrower, the United States of America."
Yes, the best of times. And now, the worst.
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Once in office, however, he set about adding to it—with the gleeful agreement of Republicans in Congress, who hiked spending, cut taxes, and let additional borrowing fill the gap. During Trump's four years in office, the national debt grew by nearly $8 trillion, and you can only blame the COVID-19 pandemic's emergency spending for about the last $3 trillion of that total.
You don't understand! That was all because of Democrats! Had Trump had a Republican majority in Congress he would have slashed the budget and paid off the debt!
Wait a moment. You're telling me he had a Republican majority and didn't do any of that?
It's not his fault! Most responsible president ever! Most libertarian president ever! Best president ever!
Note. He can't criticize dems for their part.
Note. He can't criticize Trump for his part.
I have often. He shouldn't have pushed for any covid spending. But the bills were also veto proof.
In erics last article regarding this he even admitted 70% of spending under Trump was from increases to payments on the debt and programs pushed before he was president, policies started by democrats. Without 60 votes in the senate. Trump couldn't end those things.
I'm actually informed when I criticize. You are not.
If you didn't lie you'd have nothing to say.
One big difference between the federal government and the proverbial drunken sailor; when the drunken sailor runs out of money, he stops spending.
Government is a drunken sailor with a good reputation for maintaining debt.
When government runs out of money it sells bonds. People buy bonds and now government has money. Government pays interest on these bonds and everyone is happy.
As long as people buy bonds it will continue. But someday it will stop. For whatever reason people will stop buying bonds.
That’s when life will get interesting. Living through a moment in history. Maybe Betelgeuse will supernova too.
Maybe a return to the gold standard would work.
‘Many forms of Government have been tried, and will be tried in this world of sin and woe. No one pretends that democracy is perfect or all-wise. Indeed it has been said that democracy is the worst form of Government except for all those other forms that have been tried from time to time.…’
Winston S Churchill
I think the same thing could be said about fiat currency vs hard currency pegged to a commodity.
And goes to sea once more.
"Though borrowing seemed cheap during those periods, policymakers failed to account for rollover risk, and we are now facing the cost."
Even the most clueless homeowner knows about the potential downside of Adjustable Rate Mortgages! And yet "policymakers" - ostensibly the best and the brightest they could attract to government service - failed to account for it! Have American voters learned any lessons from experience yet? Of course not!
yglesias is always standing at the front of the line to toss krugman's salad
At some point spending less and taxing more are going to have to occur. Either that, or it all falls apart.
False dichotomy. At some point spending less WILL occur whether intentional or not; and with or without tax increases. Tax increases would have to be passed intentionally, but spending cuts can – and will – happen with or without action by Congress when the money runs out and the government defaults on the government debt interest payments. If they try to print more money at that point to cover the interest payments, the Fed will no longer be able to control inflation, lenders will stop buying government securities at any interest rate, the full faith and credit of the United States will become a joke in very bad taste, and something somewhere may fall apart.
It's not a false dichotomy at all. If we don't raise taxes and spending is curtailed because of defaults and running out of money, that is everything falling apart, like I stated.
So, in order to prevent what you have described (which is everything falling apart), spending cuts and tax increases will be required.
This debate is difficult because of left/right dogma.
According to the left, all government spending is a magical "investment" into the economy. Those wise people in government know how to spend our money better than we do, so whatever they spend it on will be good, and in the end raise tax receipts because of the economic boon. Take it to its logical conclusion and 100% government spending is the ideal economy.
According to the right, all tax cuts magically increase government revenue. Every dollar that is not taken out of the economy via taxes multiplies into income and wealth that creates more government revenue than if it was never taken away. Take it to its logical conclusion and 0% taxes maximize government revenue.
In the end one side cuts taxes while they both increase spending, and nobody can figure out why the debt keeps going up.
You nailed it. The problem is one side won’t rein in spending and the other side won’t agree to raise taxes. The result is the current horrendous deficit and debt problem.
Because taxes don’t need to be raised. Take current tax revenues and use continuous growth at revenue growth rates. Plot against current spending at 0% growth. Deficits become surplus in about 8 years.
Also note how steady the percentage of gdp is as taxes no matter the tax rate. Locking spending is all one needs to do. They overspend by a lot, so cutting spending even gets us there quicker.
I'll have to check that out. If that's the case, that is awesome.
Freezing spending does eventually balance the budget. As long as inflation exists it's a mathematical certainty.
True in essence, but emphasize that tax revenues have stayed remarkably stable as a percent of GDP regardless of the marginal tax rates – before, during, and after the so-called “tax cuts” alleged by the left – over many decades. Revenues have never varied by more than 2% – or 4 percentage points – during the last eight decades while total revenues have grown massively.
Not to split hairs, but you said "spending less AND taxing more." That was what I was taking exception to.
Think I did the math for you before. But Paul Ryan also has done it. Fixing spending to 2019 levels with 0% increases creates a fairly large surplus. The biggest issue is baseline budgeting before any new programs are added, a fixed growth of 3%. The procedure under democrats also subsumed all 1 time spending bills into the baseline. Taxes never have to actually be raised. Just spending growth stopped.
We used to say "Fuck you, cut spending!"
But you and your girlfriends replaced it with "You disagreed with Trump! You've got TDS!"
If you had any sense of shame you'd find a house fire and dive into it.
Oh and don't forget about the downside on the OTHER side of the transaction ledger. All those financial institutions that went super-long on government bonds during the so-called "good times" stupidly thinking that ZIRP would last forever are now getting absolutely destroyed as the value of their bond holdings is going down practically by the day as they desperately try to sell to an ever-shrinking pool of buyers.
If the bond prices continue falling a few more months, we're almost certainly going to see a wave of bank bankruptcies just like what happened to Silicon Valley Bank earlier this year, and potentially another '08 sized financial crisis.
And this time around the Fed is really going to be caught between a rock and a hard place between they're just about out of tools and tricks in their bag to keep this house of cards propped up. In other words, the days of us being able to have both low inflation AND low interest rates at the same time may be over for good. So pick your poison.
"Those potential consequences were ignored by the political class."
The great thing about being a career politician is you never have think further ahead than the next election.
...working for a company of the nations monopoly of gun-force. They'll never have to worry about their selfish ignorance until someone out guns their monopoly of guns.
Precisely why they all have a people's written law they swear an oath to uphold over themselves before being granted such a pot of guns force authority. Yet the people (mostly Democrats) just don't seem to care anymore and instead elect Hitler, Stalin, Al-Capone wannabe's to be their lawless pot-of-guns gang leaders of a crime spree against their fellow man.
Maybe it would be a good idea to ease interest rates a bit (after a pendulum swing that ended an extended period during which they were too low).
Maybe it would be a good idea to have politicians want to sustain a stronger USD for it's citizens instead of 'stealing' their savings away on idiocy like the weather changes emergencies.
First, ooo rates are low let's take more debt. That has worked out so well for people with big houses, cars, and everything.
For the fun Dems on here, I don't care what Trump did. Not president currently. What is your team doing about it beside spending more! You can tax the rich at 100%, it still won't pay for much.
He writes:
"...a total that will only grow higher if more unplanned borrowing takes place before then...."
Like it is not a certainty, and like it would be "unplanned." Hilarious.
"During Trump's four years in office, the national debt grew by nearly $8 trillion, and you can only blame the COVID-19 pandemic's emergency spending for about the last $3 trillion of that total."
Well that's is a blatant LIE.
2017 - $20.2T debt
2018 - $21.5T debt
2019 - $22.7T debt (Total $2.5T before)
2020 - $27.7T debt ($5T on COVID)
70% of the first 3 years was increases to payments on the debt and programs in place before he became president. Eric actually had an article about this.
...And what does the cycle of bonds increasing and inflation equal again??????
Congratulations Democrats. I think you may have just launched the hyper-inflation destruction all [Na]tional So[zi]alist nations have all experienced. F'En Nazi's.
This article fails to adequately address the problem. Historically, the government would stimulate slow economic growth by lowering interest rates, while increasing deficit spending. This would result in asset and sometimes also consumer price inflation. Then, the government would reduce inflation by raising interest rates while reducing deficit spending. The build-up of debts could have continued for decades, albeit slowing the economy.
However, Biden has created a mess beyond belief. Bidenomics increased the deficit while the Fed was raising interest rates. Biden worked against the Fed to stimulate the economy, thus forcing the Fed to raise interest rates much higher than would otherwise be needed to depress the economy. Because the debt was already so high, the higher interest rates increased deficit spending and the debt even more, resulting in a debt doom loop. Now, the deficits and debt are causing even higher interest rates since the government has to finance and refinance them in the Treasury bond market. This is depressing the economy.
You’re missing the big picture: Excessive government spending created inflation. Inflation means bond investors need much higher interest rates just to stay even. Higher interest rates mean interest payments take a much larger part of the federal budget, and even higher deficits. If this goes on, eventually the interest payments will exceed the taxes that can be collected.
The federal government won’t default, so instead it will print more money to make the payments – but that pushes inflation higher, so in truth it’s a partial default by devaluing the money. Many nations have gone down this road before, and the end result is that you roll a wheelbarrow full of paper money to the store to buy a package of toilet paper. (You could use the money instead, but it’s scratchy.)
Why does anyone continue buying federal bonds under these conditions? Because when the US federal government goes down the tubes, so do stocks and other bonds. it's likely that the only investment that survives is your house (but at a much smaller market value, because who has the real assets to buy it?) or gold in a vault (requiring you to pay storage fees, and not giving much assurance that the vault manager won't steal your gold).
None of that is new. I’m talking about the unprecedented acceleration of debt caused by Biden and the Democrats when they increased deficit spending while the Fed was increasing interest rates.
Sorry pok, the drunken sailor can't take a second job.
Yeah tell that to Greece or Venezuela or China. It's real. You might not like it but it's the same as your credit card debt. The thing is the government can print more funny money to pay it, lowing the value for everyone - look at inflation when 3 trillion got dumped in the system.
If the debt isn't real, why not have a 10 trillion delict per year?
It’s the fake-median legal standard of real value. So unless you don’t mind being paid for your labors in tabs of toilet paper it carries the same legal standard as real value.
And that is precisely why inflation is nothing but a tax. One that takes real value right out from under you (STOLEN) and funnels it into to those pockets doing quantitative easing (COUNTERFEITING).