America Is in a Debt Crisis. Will Trump or Biden Address It at the Debate?
The candidate who grasps the gravity of this situation and proposes concrete steps to address it will demonstrate the leadership our nation now desperately needs. The stakes couldn't be higher.

During and after this week's presidential debate, we must look beyond rhetoric and personality to the core issues shaping America's future. The most pressing is the unsustainable growth of government spending and ballooning national debt, which promises to rob Americans of wealth and living standards in the coming decades. Make no mistake, it's a genuine crisis demanding immediate attention. Dealing with it responsibly should be the litmus test for presidential leadership.
A recent Congressional Budget Office (CBO) report paints a dire picture. Projected deficits have climbed alarmingly high, far exceeding previous estimates. The federal budget deficit is now projected to reach $1.9 trillion in 2024, about equal to a staggering 6.7 percent of annual gross domestic product (GDP). More troubling still is the exponential growth in government spending compared to projections from just four years ago.
Back in 2020, the CBO projected that federal outlays would reach $7.5 trillion by 2030. The latest report puts that number at $8.5 trillion—an additional $1 trillion in just four years. The projected deficit for 2030 also increased by roughly 25 percent, or $450 billion, in those four years. Meanwhile, projected debt accumulation grew by 20 percent. In 2020, the CBO projected that the federal debt held by the public would by 2030 reach $31.4 trillion. The latest report now puts that at $37.9 trillion. It will, however, grow another $10 trillion by 2034, to $47.8 trillion!
Contrary to what you may have heard, this rapid expansion of government is more than a response to recent crises, though some of it does reflect the oversized response to COVID-19. More importantly, the expansion results from a fundamental shift in the size and scope of federal activities.
Fiscal recklessness threatens the very foundations of our economic prosperity. As government expands, it crowds out private investment, stifles innovation, and places an ever-growing burden on future generations. The rising costs of debt service alone—projected to reach $1.7 trillion annually by 2034—will consume an ever-larger share of our national resources, leaving less for critical investments in infrastructure, education, and research. The costs of these interest payments, in turn, will be paid for by more borrowing. That will fuel inflation and make the Fed's job harder.
These are a few reasons why growing debt increases our vulnerability to economic shocks and geopolitical crises. It reduces our fiscal flexibility to respond to future recessions or national emergencies and potentially undermines the dollar's status as the world's reserve currency.
The candidate who truly grasps the gravity of this situation and proposes concrete, realistic steps to address it will demonstrate the leadership our nation now desperately needs. A serious president must commit to talking about this issue by examining every federal program and agency, eliminating redundancies, and devolving appropriate responsibilities to state and local levels. More importantly, we need a thorough review of entitlement programs.
Recent numbers from the Manhattan Institute's Brian Riedl show things are on track to get much worse over the next 30 years, with accumulated deficits of $115 trillion, including Social Security and Medicare deficits of $124 trillion (the rest of the budget will produce a surplus of $9 trillion). Basically, Social Security and Medicare are the problem, and no candidate should be taken seriously if he continues to claim his administration won't touch the programs, like both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump have done.
For long-term economic stability, we must have a credible plan to gradually reduce our debt-to-GDP ratio. This should include setting specific targets for deficit reduction over the next decade, implementing automatic spending reforms if fiscal targets are not met, and reforming the budget-making process. While not directly a fiscal measure, reducing the regulatory burden on businesses can spur economic growth and indirectly improve our fiscal position by increasing tax revenues without raising tax rates.
As voters, we must demand that both candidates address these issues head-on during the campaign season. Vague promises and populist rhetoric are insufficient. We need detailed, actionable plans to put America on a sustainable fiscal path. The candidate who rises to this challenge—who has the courage to speak honestly about the tough choices ahead and the vision to chart a course toward fiscal sanity—will prove himself worthy of leading our nation.
In these turbulent times, only by reining in the leviathan of government can we secure prosperity and liberty for future generations. The stakes couldn't be higher. Let's judge the candidates not by their charisma or their attacks on each other but by their commitment to doing what must be done. The future of our republic depends on it.
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Prediction:
They will not.
Does it even matter anymore? I don't think America in it's current form can even balance its budget let alone pay down the unpayable debt.
Enjoy the toboggan ride down, it's a hell of a steep hill.
Supporting Israel, the stolen shithole apartheid state, while they’re committing genocide in Gaza has cost every nation signatory to the UN genocide convention their credibility. They ALL stand as pariahs on the world’s stage.
Israel stolen shithole apartheid state has received more aid most of it military from the U.S. than any other nation, 250 billion, since its theft in 1948 which started the last 75 years of conflict in the Middle East.
But that’s not anywhere near the total cost all the theft of Palestine.
The Balfour declaration was a promise of Palestine to Jews for bringing the anti war US into WW1 on the side of Britain that resulted in two more years of war and millions of lives.
Jewish Bolsheviks led by Lenin also overthrew the Russian monarchy in 1917 creating communism and the KGB. How much has Russian communism cost?
In 1932 Jews were becoming impatient for their promised land, Palestine, and coordinated global boycotts against Germany to drive the world into WW2. How much did that cost?
In 1948 Jews finally stole Palestine with Allied weapons referencing the Balfour Declaration and initiated the Middle East conflict that has raged and grown ever since. How much has that mess cost the world?
The Costs to American Taxpayers of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict: $3 Trillion BEFORE their holocaust in Gaza.
https://ifamericansknew.org/stat/cost.html
Refuted
Biden already addressed the Student Loan Debt Crisis, and the right-wing courts thwarted his every move.
You seem to be confusing individual debt crises with national debt crises.
You seem to be confusing sarcasm with reality.
This is all sarcasmic's fault. If he were actually sarcastic once in a while, the sheep wouldn't be so easily confused.
Someone whose whole schtick was supposed to be sarcasm turned out to be a earnest and genuine idiot.
At the debate? Who gives a shit which one pays lip service to it? If I were to guess who brings it up, it would be Trump.
Which one is more likely to do anything about it once elected?
Oh no, Biden will bring it up by swearing he has reduced the deficit and the national debt, because the courts ordered him to not spend $143 billion reducing student debt.
Will he still claim he took over at 9% inflation?
Oh Ronnie.
You see the trees, but not the forest.
China.
This is all about China's ascension. The Democrats want it, and so do most of the Republicans apparently. They know how communism works, and they expect to be on the side that benefits the most from it. Fools, the lot of them.
Look at every single thing they say and do. See how it weakens America, but empowers China. EVERYTHING. From a grossly diminished education system, to pRiDe hedonism even at top military levels, to the inflation that cripples the American consumer, to the intentional destruction of American birthrates, to the crippling of American industry on the altar of environmentalism, to the intentional dissemination of criminals and terrorists into Main Street America - it ALL serves the same goal.
Now couple that with Chinese interests in American land. You know how much farmland they own? Oddly all next to American air bases (modern wars are won on air superiority). Now couple that with the amount of spies and saboteurs they send to infiltrate our private industry to either cripple or reverse engineer emerging tech. Now couple that with flooding the consumer market with slave-built cheap goods that the American market can't compete with.
If this country had any brains at all, we'd send 1000 hot nukes to China yesterday. And if it's nuclear holocaust or MAD, then so be it. But we don't. Because those in power are working for China. Whether intentionally or as useful idiots.
Good God No. It's just about power. All politicians are in it for the power. That is the end-all, the be-all, the all-all. Nothing else matters, they don't even see anything else.
Power power power.
Don't see how you're disagreeing with me here.
Really? You can't even read, or remember what you wrote?
You: "This is all about China’s ascension."
Me: "It’s just about power."
Whacked out democrats may have coined alt right as a scare tactic, but what else do you propose this ideology be called?
Anyone selling out this country to China should be tortured to death very slowly.
I'd rather be Chinese than Russian/North Korean.
Nothing is going to be done about deficits and the debt. Not by anyone. The total collapse of our monetary system and economy is now inevitable. It doesn't matter at all what presidential and congressional candidates say about it, or don't say.
I've reached the same conclusion.
Nothing lasts forever. The collapse of anything is inevitable. The only question is the timeline, whether it can go on a few more decades, centuries, etc.
We have months or years, not decades.
read my comment below. Collapse is rarely collapse-collapse– like a building falling in. Collapse is, you walk by the building in 1954 and it’s a bustling center of economic activity, filled with workers making a decent salary, then you walk by it again in 2024 and it’s surrounded by boarded up houses, empty storefronts, homeless tents, the top floors are all abandoned and in the bottom floor is a safe injection site with a rainbow flag in the window.
On the one hand, you have the guy who worked with the Dems to end the sequester and on the other hand, is the guy who thought printing more money would solve inflation.
Nope nothing will be done.
Why bother? When even "libertarian" publications like Reason come out bashing Republicans for spending reductions (Obamacare repeal), what's the option? 100% taxes? I'm sure that will work out great.
We can revamp Military spending. Ridiculous how much waste and overspending goes on there just to make us feel like our penises are longer than they actually are.
The debt will not be addressed in any serious way at the debate, the political risk is too high. But both of these guys will be lame ducks if elected so there is a miniscule that one of them might take some action in office. Trump, maybe. Biden, no fucking way.
With CNN "moderators", I doubt the debt will be acknowledged, let alone discussed.
There is a reason they have a veto switch.
It sucks that we are at this place, but if one of the two candidates actually address the issue, it would probably lose them votes because actually solving the issue will cause some short term pain. Same for any candidate who actually addresses entitlement reform
Just think of all of the writers of this publication and how they voted last time. I can’t imagine a single one of them changing their minds, regardless of what either candidate says
It sucks that we are at this place, but if one of the two candidates actually address the issue, it would probably lose them votes because actually solving the issue will cause some short term pain. Same for any candidate who actually addresses entitlement reform
this is indeed a point that should be stressed.
Politicians respond to political incentives and political deterrents.
Yeah, I'm trying to imagine a world where they won't vote for the candidate who reluctantly and strategically freed Julian Assange.
Vero should put away the crystal ball and look at objective reality. Two Kleptocracy faction puppets are fighting over control of service pistols and ignoring Oliver. Betting Trump is capable of accidentally uttering a truthhood he'd say Biden eco-seeks to ban coal, gasoline, natural gas, electricity and water. Biden could counter that Trump's Comstockos seek to ban condoms, birth control pills, abortion pills, abortion, nekkid pictures, books, Beatles albums, weed, mescaline acid, EX, catarrh powder, poppy goo, banana peels, The Velvet Underground, glue, paint thinner, ether, nitrous oxide, betting--everything except race hatred, police violence, no-knock raids, phonetaps. Their only true statements are about each other.
Trump’s Comstockos seek to ban condoms, birth control pills, abortion pills, abortion, nekkid pictures
A guy married to the first first lady in history that you can get naked pictures of on the internet. Talk about a great time to be alive.
In 1991, Larry Burkett published “The Coming Economic Earthquake”. He presented a lot of data on government deficit spending, insisted that it was unsustainable, and said that it would all come crashing down in the early 2000s.
While budgets got better for a while in the 90s, there have been no true structural changes. Since then, many articles like this one have been published about our unsustainable deficits.
While I believe that it will all come crashing down EVENTUALLY, too many people have said too often that it’s going to crash “tomorrow”. Voters no longer believe it and will punish any politician who proposes real solutions.
“Crashing down” is an unfortunate term that too many people use. “Crashing down” could be defined as a cold-water-walkup flat costing 3/4 of a million dollars, with young people unable to get on the property ladder, while store shelves are still mysteriously empty 3 years after a so-called pandemic forced millions into semi-permanent unemployment while our streets are lined with homeless tents, grocery stores now lock mundane shelf items and a whole bunch of developing countries laugh at us while not picking up phone calls from the president and start their own financial petro-dollar system that doesn’t include ours.
That could be something that people might reasonably define as “crashing down”.
The only way to rid this country of debt once and for all is to eliminate the GOP. Dems do a far better job at regulating the bottom line. Every time we have a GOP administration, the debt goes up, we then wise up and vote the paedos out of office and then spend the next 4 to 8 years fixing shit the Reds swamped up.
Secondly, debt is sadly not the biggest issue we face. But we can start by taxing churches as corporations. No more hiding behind the pulpit. Boost tax on bullets, high capacity weaponry and any weekend gun warrior accessories. That should take care of a large amount of the deficit. Just make sure the GOP doesn’t put it in their own back pockets.