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National Debt

The National Debt Is Becoming Your Local Problem

Federal overspending is squeezing states and cities, forcing them to raise taxes, slash services, or pile on more debt.

Mariana Trujillo | 8.1.2025 12:15 PM

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Pedestrians walk past the National Debt Clock in New York | Liu Yanan / Xinhua News Agency/Newscom
(Liu Yanan / Xinhua News Agency/Newscom)

The $29 trillion federal debt held by the public is becoming an increasingly local problem. Washington's fiscal challenges have led to increased borrowing costs as well as reduced federal aid to states, cities, and other local governments—who may soon have to reconsider their budgets as they face a difficult choice: cut services, raise taxes, dip into reserves, or incur further debt.

Based on estimates done before the latest reconciliation bill (the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is expected to significantly deteriorate the country's fiscal outlook), the federal debt is expected to grow from 124 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2025 to 135 percent in 2035, which means that the federal government will absorb an increasingly larger share of the economy and capital markets.

As a result, investable capital will flow at increasing rates to U.S. debt, making it necessary for other borrowers—including state and local governments—to offer higher interest rates on their bonds to compete with U.S. Treasury debt.

Indeed, as federal rates have risen, it has already become more expensive for local governments to borrow. As of late July 2025, the Bloomberg 30-year tax-exempt municipal bond yield benchmark reached a peak of 4.81 percent, a sharp rise from the COVID-era lows of 1.5 percent.

Federally, net interest costs are forecasted to surpass all other spending categories, besides Social Security, by 2052. This trend of rising interest costs crowding out other spending is likely to trickle down to state and local governments.

Another channel through which the national debt may influence local budgets is federal aid. Federal grants are currently the largest single source of revenue for state and local governments, and they are decreasing. According to the Census Survey of State and Local Government Finances, in 2022 (the most recent year available), 28 percent of all state and local revenue came from the federal government—a share larger than income, property, sales, or any other tax. Some of this money came in the form of special COVID-relief grants. These grants provided American municipal and state governments with $885 billion in direct aid and were required to be spent by 2024. Before COVID, federal aid represented about 20 percent of state and local government funding and primarily funded Medicaid.

In theory, these COVID grants were intended to fund public health spending or mitigate COVID-related economic impacts. They could not be used to pay off legal judgments, settle debts, fund underfunded public employee pensions, or prop up rainy-day/reserve funds. In practice, however, much of the money went to nonemergency and recurring programs. With pandemic-era grants expiring in 2024, state and local governments are now under pressure to find alternative funding for these services.

Besides the scheduled phase-out of COVID aid, fiscal pressure in Washington has led to reductions in other types of funding for states. The latest reconciliation bill capped the federal Medicaid reimbursements, passed a larger share of Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) costs to states, and drastically reduced Biden-era clean energy infrastructure grants. Funding for some transportation projects was slashed, too. More cuts are likely to come.

This comes as states have already been feeling a strain on their budgets. This year, many states are projecting shortfalls in the billions—including California, Washington, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. Even Florida is expected to face deficits of $2.8 billion in 2026, and potentially $6.9 billion in 2027.

This fiscal tightening is not limited to states: Major cities like Los Angeles, San Diego, Houston, and Chicago are also facing substantial budget gaps.

Although many of the fiscally stressed governments have announced hiring freezes and other prudent cost containment measures, they have not been enough. Instead of "right-sizing" the scope of their activities, state and local governments—faced with both higher borrowing costs and less federal support—have unfortunately opted to dip into their record-high savings accumulated during COVID and issue more bonds, even amid today's elevated interest rates.

As federal support dries up from many ends, and its return becomes not only politically but economically less feasible, state and local governments should resist the temptation to push costs to an indefinite future and drive down precious savings to fund permanent programs—precisely the approach that has led to the status quo—and opt instead for a serious, responsible reorganization of their finances.

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NEXT: Are Trump's Tariffs Responding to an Actual Emergency?

Mariana Trujillo is a policy analyst with Reason Foundation's Pension Integrity Project.

National DebtDebtGovernment SpendingFederal governmentTaxpayersTaxesStatesLocal GovernmentState Governments
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  1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

    It’s been a problem for decades that no one wants to touch, kind of like pissing on that third rail. Sure, you might live through it, but it’ll be shocking while you’re doing it.

    1. Freeperson   2 months ago

      The DEBT is not the DEFICIT. And the DEFICIT is not the DEBT. They are separate problems.

      Government BORROWING drives up the debt, not government SPENDING.

      The solution to our debt problem is simple: STOP ISSUING DEBT-BASED MONEY! Begin issuing pure “unbacked” fiat money to fund the deficit, rather than going further into debt. The inflationary impact of unbacked dollars is no worse than the inflationary impact of the same amount of debt-backed dollars. Issuing unbacked dollars will halt the increase in the national debt and its crushing $1 trillion in annual interest. Paying off part of the maturing debt each year and rolling over the rest will eventually bring the national debt (and its taxpayer-financed interest payments) down to zero. See http://www.fixourmoney.com .

  2. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    The $29 trillion federal debt held

    Recycled article without update?

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

      More than likely. Reason has been lazy as of the past decade.

    2. Chumby   2 months ago

      “…held by the public.” Per their source, about $7.35T is intergovernmental debt:

      https://debtor-nation-2025.vercel.app/composition

      1. Gaear Grimsrud   2 months ago

        All of the "trust funds" including SS are intergovernmental debt. Each one has net assets of exactly zero. The federal government theoretically owes interest on this debt but it is an accounting entry and will never be paid. T bills held by foreign banks and investors are what require direct payment from the treasury and affect spending.

        1. Chumby   2 months ago

          JD Vance is wrong about the lockbox.

  3. Chumby   2 months ago

    When govt starts playing mommy, daddy, and Santa these things tend to happen.

  4. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

    Terrible jobs number Peanuts. Only 67,000. Plus they subtracted 258,000 from the previous two months.

    You Peanuts howled like banshees when that happened with Sleepy Joe.

    1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

      Hey, Shrike, how does it feel to know that the entire Russiagate shit was made up of whole cloth by the Clinton campaign and fully endorsed by your messiah, Obama? And that people might just go to jail over it, like Brennan?

      1. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

        No one is going to jail for the Russian collusion of 2016 unless Donnie sends his gestapo in to imprison his enemies without a trial.

        The records are clear. Trump Tower meeting with Kremlin officials. Secret back channel to the Kremlin requested by the Trump campaign.

        Donnie lies.

        1. Neutral not Neutered   2 months ago

          LMFAO, still regurgitating debunked lies funded by Clinton and Soros and promoted by your heroes on The View and Rachel Maddow?

          1. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

            Fatass Donnie admitted to the meeting with the Kremlin. But he lied and said they discussed a charity.

            He needed a better lie.

            1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

              Damn, Shrike, you’re pathetic.

            2. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

              Let’s have some fun, fucktard.

              Eat your fucking heart out.

              https://x.com/floppingaces/status/1951298593245270116?s=46&t=qeA47-JjK6vq0pfnxg60dA

              The Durham Annex was just declassified—and it exposes the Clinton campaign's plan to fabricate the Trump-Russia narrative BEFORE Trump was even the nominee.
              It also shows Brennan briefed Obama, Biden, Clapper & Comey on the entire thing.
              Let’s walk through it: thread
              1/13

              In JAN 2016, intel intercepted a convo between Debbie Wasserman Schultz and Open Society officials.
              She allegedly said Obama wanted to “scuttle” the FBI’s Clinton email probe to protect his legacy.
              This was months before Trump even secured the nomination.
              2/13

              In MAR 2016, Russian analysts reported that Clinton’s team—with help from “special services” (FBI/CIA?)—was preparing to tie Trump to the “Russian mafia” via shady business links.
              They were naming names: Agalarov, Sapir, Bayrock, etc.
              3/13

              JULY 2016: Emails from Clinton-world revealed plans for a “long-term affair to demonize Putin and Trump.”
              They even claimed: “Later the FBI will add more oil to the fire.”
              How did they know that?
              4/13

              On AUG 3, 2016, Brennan briefed Obama, Biden, Clapper, and Comey about the Clinton plan to blame Trump using a fabricated Russia scandal.
              This is in Brennan’s handwritten notes.
              5/13

              Durham’s annex confirms the FBI was fully aware this story came from Clinton’s camp.
              They dismissed it as “not credible”…
              ...but still launched Crossfire Hurricane anyway—using Clinton-paid opposition research.
              6/14

              They knew the Steele dossier was garbage.
              They knew Brennan told Obama.
              They knew the Clinton plan existed.
              And yet they kept the hoax going and used it to justify spying on Trump’s team.
              7/13

              The “official origin” of Russiagate—Papadopoulos + Downer—was a pretext.
              The FBI was already running informants, surveilling Trump staff, and laundering leaks to the media months earlier.
              8/13

              So what the hell was this?
              A political operation.
              An intelligence-led information op against a presidential candidate.
              They gambled it would never be exposed. They lost.
              9/13

              And the media? Fully on board.
              Brennan & Clapper now blame Comey.
              Susan Miller claims she authored the ICA.
              But none of them mentioned the Clinton plan. Ever.
              10/13

              Walter Kirn nails it:
              “We’ve been investigating the pimple on the ass of a very large hairy hominid.”
              Now the beast is in full view.
              11/13

              Final thought:
              This wasn’t a “mistake.”
              It was a premeditated act of fraud by the most powerful institutions in America.
              And they bet you'd never find out.
              You just did.
              12/13

              floppingaces.net/most-wanted/th…

              /fin

              13/13

              Open Society…aren’t they your handlers, Shrike, at least before they shitcanned you?

        2. sarcasmic   2 months ago

          No one is going to jail for the Russian collusion of 2016 unless Donnie sends his gestapo in to imprison his enemies without a trial.

          Well he is building a personal police force that is going around the country, grabbing enemies, imprisoning them without any due process, and not allowing people to see what's going on inside. It's not a stretch to see him expanding his list of enemies.

          1. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

            DREAMY LIBERTARIAN!

            1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

              Shrike, Sarc is too old for you,

    2. sarcasmic   2 months ago

      2022: Biden is killing jobs! It's the end of the world!

      2025: So what if we lost a few job? Didn't need them anyway.

      1. InsaneTrollLogic (Muting Sarc like he mutes us)   2 months ago

        You’re now white knighting the pedo. That’s a great look, Sarc.

  5. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

    This is sickening. I’ve been away. Has Reason covered it yet?

    https://www.nbcnews.com/health/health-news/trump-administration-launching-new-private-health-tracking-system-big-rcna222178

    1. Chumby   2 months ago

      I’ve been away.

      GBI call you in for questioning regarding a missing boy?

      1. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

        https://www.joemygod.com/2025/07/maga-evangelical-leader-who-warned-of-sexually-deviant-lgbtqs-pleads-guilty-to-child-porn-charges/

        MAGA evangelical leader just arrested for child porn. It’s always one of you guys.

        This asshole hates homos but loves Trump and kiddie porn.

        1. Chumby   2 months ago

          You posted links to child pornography here. You’re next to be arrested and charged. Enjoy your lengthy stay at Fulton County Jail.

    2. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

      The government goons are setting up a fat database with 60 companies contributing medical data for surveillance.

      Hey Jesse! No more Little Debbie’s for you, you fat motherfucker! You tripped the government BMI limit!

      1. Chumby   2 months ago

        One of your x-rays made it online:

        https://www.elitedaily.com/humor/website-compiles-x-rays-things-stuck-peoples-butts/927393

        Pluggo indeed. Was that your Oranageman Oh So Good you misplaced?

        1. Fat Rush Limpcock (King of the Conservatives)   2 months ago

          You better watch your BMI. You don’t want Donnie’s Fat Police arresting you.

          Donnie is 6’3” and 220 lbs. He claims. But his ankles are swollen like tree stumps. I don’t want the POS to die. I want him to see how hated he is in 2-3 years.

          1. Chumby   2 months ago

            I’m fit. Speaking of fit, enjoy all the fitting your prison mates will be performing in you.

            1. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

              Stop trying to steal sarc from me.

              Sarc. He isnt well groomed.

              1. Chumby   2 months ago

                Sarc seems to be in love with Sockasmic.

    3. TrickyVic (old school)   2 months ago

      I hate to break it to you, but stuff like this is already in play before Trump took office. Please review EVERY consent form you are handed by a medical practice.

      Hospitals are required by law to send data to a Reginal Health Information Organization (RHIO). What RHIOs can do with it is just a question of laws. With that, keep in mind they define your privacy as who is allowed to see your information. They don't believe your medical info is only between you, your provider, and who pays for the visit.

  6. JesseAz (Prime Meanster of Sarcasia)   2 months ago

    To think Reason publishes this after months of decrying DOGE audits, ignoring recission bills, and even defending university funding yesterday.

    1. Longtobefree   2 months ago

      I suspect thinking was not involved - - - - - -

    2. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

      It's also mighty funny that they ONLY publish these attacks during Republican administrations to say they are failing the public then go silent as Democrats put the spending on overdrive.

      1. Rick James   2 months ago

        I like how we have to go to 2nd, 3rd, 4th and 9th order effects of high federal spending to point out the failures of California's and Washington's and Illinois' budgeting.

  7. Sometimes a Great Notion   2 months ago

    In theory, these COVID grants were intended to fund public health spending or mitigate COVID-related economic impacts.

    In practice they were used for graft and corruption at best and at worst, to harm children's futures.

    Thanks Congress and Donald Trump, fucking scunbags the lot of you.

    1. Eeyore   2 months ago

      Government money IS waste fraud and abuse. It is always mostly bad.

  8. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

    Blaming California's overspending on Trump's overspending is pretty, umm, rich.

    1. Eeyore   2 months ago

      It's some new form of comedy.

      1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

        Dang. I was hoping Chumby would tell me how poor that joke was.

        1. Chumby   2 months ago

          Don’t bank on it.

          1. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

            Check!

          2. Rick James   2 months ago

            We were all waiting for the penny to drop.

  9. Longtobefree   2 months ago

    Not in The Free State of Florida - - - - -

    Florida state budget overview (FY 2025-26)
    Florida's budget for Fiscal Year (FY) 2025-2026, signed by Governor Ron DeSantis, totals $114.77 billion after line-item vetoes. This marks a decrease from the previous year's budget.
    Here's a breakdown of the budget by funding sources for FY 2024-2025 (latest available detailed information):
    General Revenue Fund: $48.62 billion
    State Trust Funds: $29.97 billion
    Federal Trust Funds: $37.93 billion
    Key features and highlights of the FY 2025-26 budget
    Fiscal Responsibility: The budget emphasizes fiscal conservatism, reflecting a focus on reducing spending and maintaining robust reserves.
    Reserves: The budget maintains $15.7 billion in reserves, including a record-high $4.9 billion in the Budget Stabilization Fund.
    Debt Reduction: The budget allocates $830 million for an accelerated debt repayment program, continuing a trend of reducing the state's tax-supported debt.
    Tax Relief: The budget includes $2.2 billion in tax relief, encompassing permanent and temporary tax changes benefiting businesses and individuals. This includes sales tax holidays and specific exemptions.

  10. Uncle Jay   2 months ago

    The headline should read, "The National Debt Is Becoming Your Local Problem Brought to You by the Republicans and Democrats."

  11. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

    "they face a difficult choice: cut services, raise taxes, dip into reserves, or incur further debt"

    This is not - repeat, NOT! - a difficult choice. They should - and MUST - cut so-called "services." It is the choice they least WANT to make as power-hungry politicians but soon it will be unavoidable. Raising tax rates does not necessarily result in increased tax revenues. Incurring further debt may not be an option if people who still have some savings left are no longer willing to loan it to government. Inflation will continue to increase making everything more expensive including interest rates. My fellow Americans have been demanding free stuff at other peoples' expense for so long that now the chickens are coming home to roost and now they're going to pay the price. My fellow Americans are going be deprived of free shit cold turkey and they are not going to like it. Tough shit!

  12. Rick James   2 months ago

    Slashing services you say?

    Illinois Governor JB Pritzker also recently proposed to cut the four-year-old program that provides health coverage for undocumented migrants as part of his 2025 fiscal plan.

    California is also eyeing up similar legislation, as Governor Gavin Newsom announced earlier this month that he was going to help reduce a $12 billion deficit by freezing health coverage for immigrants living in the state without legal status.

    If states decide to eliminate their state-funded coverage for immigrants to avoid the penalty, more than 1.9 million could lose their health coverage, according to KFF data.

    1. Rick James   2 months ago

      There all the states were, responsibly managing their budgets and minding their own business when... ALL OF A SUDDEN!

    2. Rick James   2 months ago

      "We're not paying $200 million for housekeeping anymore a year. We're not going to pay for illegal immigrants in states that are submitting those claims. Why should people living in Mississippi, Texas, or Florida be paying for illegal immigrants getting healthcare in California?"

      California State Senator Scott Wiener, said about the "Big, Beautiful Bill," according to KFF: "We need to stand our ground. California has made a decision that we want universal health care and that we are going to ensure that everyone has access to health care, and that we're not going to have millions of undocumented people getting their primary care in emergency rooms."

  13. I, Woodchipper   2 months ago

    None of these local govs are "forced" to raise taxes. They are CHOOSING to raise taxes.

    1. Chumby   2 months ago

      Until morale improves, we are forced to continue the beatings.

  14. TJJ2000   2 months ago

    "precisely the approach that has led to the status quo—and opt instead for a serious, responsible reorganization of their finances."

    "No need for a 'serious, responsible reorganization of their finances'. It's just all Trumps fault.", Why leftards will never learn. They blame-shift / self-project endlessly.

  15. Social Justice is neither   2 months ago

    Funny how you Leftists cunts don't give a shit about long term forecasts or fiscal responsibility except when you can use it as a weapon. This issue didn't start today but you refuse to hold one side to any standard of responsibility at all. Fuck you.

  16. Stuck in California   2 months ago

    >the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which is expected to significantly deteriorate the country's fiscal outlook

    So, what's up with this Act Blue talking point here? I keep seeing it here, even hearing it from someone who is in thrall of NPR's news and repeats this shit. It's obviously Democrat messaging, since it's repeated almost verbatim.

    I mean, I'm not a fan of the amount of spending, but they act like this is the first time the budget hasn't been balanced, or like there wasn't horrendous screeching over every possible reduction in spending this spring. Perpetual lawsuits, feet dragging, malicious compliance, and everything else the swamp creatures and their captive media could do to cause trouble. A simple audit of a government agency should not cause this level of writhing and gnashing of teeth, but seeing how it does do they really think this is the breaking point for the budget?

    Like it wouldn't have been WAY worse if Harris was president. Or like, suddenly, a congress not too different from the one that dropped a couple TRILLION in pork barrel spending on top of the worse inflation in my lifetime and then made Covid emergency spending levels the new normal would suddenly be able to balance the budget and get everyone in the Federal government on board.

    Suddenly, half a century of reckless government policies are forgotten and it's THIS reconciliation that's brought us to the brink of ruin.

    I'd have more faith in these partisan hacks libertarian writers if they'd look at things more holistically.

  17. NCMB   2 months ago

    Our previous US Representative had a penchant for running around the district handing out $1M checks from the federal government to local entities, in particular emergency responders and public schools. I repeatedly called him out for the practice as those are local services serving local populations that should be funded at the local level. None of those services are a federal responsibility. If the local population feels the need for improved local service, they need to pay for it locally.

    His reply to me was that he was only “getting back our fair share of tax dollars sent to Washington.” I told him there was a better way that would result in more money being available to the local governments: don’t take it in the first place. A dollar sent back to local governments comes back less the federal administrative cost of collecting it and disbursing it.

    At a local level, my home county, in a mostly rural coastal area, has an annual general revenue budget of about $112M. The county has a general fund balance, the “rainy day” fund, of $71M. Now, I get having a reserve in this area is important (tropical systems are a frequent threat) but a balance equal to over 60% seems a little high, but that’s just me. I’m guessing local governments around the country have some type of reserve available.

    Typically when there is a threat of lower federal funding being sent to local governments, the first cry from those governments and members of Congress is that teachers and first responders will have to be let go and people will die. It’s funny how there’s no mention of reducing government bureaucracy or getting rid of half of the assistants to the assistant vice principals in the school system.

    The upshot of this? If federal spending was used only to fund federal responsibilities maybe there could be a balanced budget.

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