“America has been on an unsustainable fiscal path for many years, since long before this pandemic.” The Peter G. Peterson Foundation
- The new $1.9 trillion stimulus spending package, on top of trillions already spent to revive the economy, is driving the national debt to unprecedented levels.
- History shows that high government debt often leads to inflation, and an uptick in inflation is expected this year as the economy recovers.
The $1.9 trillion federal stimulus package will help many families, businesses, and state and local governments hard hit by the pandemic. But it is also fueling concerns about the ballooning federal debt, inflation, and how investors can protect themselves.
The Congressional Budget Office projected that the federal budget deficit will rise during the second half of the decade and climb steadily over the following 20 years. By 2051, the federal debt is expected to double as a share of the economy.
The projections by the nonpartisan office forecast a more challenging long-term outlook, as interest costs on the national debt rise and federal spending on health programs swells along with an aging population. “A growing debt burden could increase the risk of a fiscal crisis and higher inflation as well as undermine confidence in the U.S. dollar, making it more costly to finance public and private activity in international markets,” the CBO report said.
Today President Biden signed the #AmericanRescuePlan into law. Here’s a breakdown of the major programs and how much they cost. https://t.co/4JwRXW0Grv
— Peterson Foundation (@pgpfoundation) March 11, 2021
Our federal fiscal budget has structural problems, driven by well-known and predictable factors that include an aging population, rising healthcare costs and compounding interest—along with insufficient revenues to meet our commitments, according to The Peter G. Peterson Foundation.
Over the last 20 years, the federal government’s debt has grown faster than at any time since the end of World War II, running well ahead of economic growth. In addition to COVID-related spending, rising federal debt has been driven by longer-term trends including increasing Social Security and Medicare spending for an aging population. Today, according to the Congressional Budget Office, the federal debt is $22.5 trillion, more than 100% of gross domestic product (GDP).
Why debt matters
New Fidelity research suggests that higher debt can slow economic growth, and ultimately lead to higher inflation and more volatile financial markets. Warns Dirk Hofschire, senior vice president of asset allocation research at Fidelity Investments: “Debt in the world’s largest economies is fast becoming the most substantial risk in investing today.”
In the short term, Fidelity’s director of global macro Jurrien Timmer says a market consensus has emerged that inflation will rise in the second half of 2021: “An inflationary boom could result from the combination of COVID infections falling, vaccinations rising, ongoing massive fiscal stimulus, pent-up consumer demand, and low interest rates.”
FEDERAL DEBT IS ON AN UNSUSTAINABLE PATH
Longer term, Hofschire says, “The rise in debt is unsustainable. Historically, no country has perpetually increased its debt/GDP ratio. The highest levels of debt all topped out around 250% of GDP. Since 1900, 18 countries have hit a debt/GDP level of 100%, generally due to the need to pay for fighting world wars or extreme economic downturns such as the Great Depression. After hitting the 100% threshold, 10 countries reduced their debt, 7 increased it, and one kept its level of debt roughly the same.”
Only time will tell which way the US goes and when. But Hofschire thinks “government policies are likely to drift toward more inflationary options.” Among them:
- Federal spending aimed at lower- and middle-income consumers
- Increased public works spending not offset by higher taxes
- Protectionist measures with a “made in America” rationale
- Infrastructure upgrades targeting sectors such as renewable energy, 5G telecom, and health care
- Higher inflation targeting by the Federal Reserve
- Mandatory pay increases for workers benefiting from government assistance
In the longer term, if further free-spending fiscal policies are adopted while interest rates stay low and credit remains abundant, the likelihood of inflation could increase. But history suggests the magnitude and timing is uncertain. Many predicted an inflation surge the last time the federal government embarked on major fiscal and monetary stimulus after the global financial crisis, but inflation mostly failed to appear.
THE GROWING DEBT IS CAUSED BY A STRUCTURAL MISMATCH BETWEEN SPENDING AND REVENUES according to The Peterson Foundation
Why the national debt matters, according the The Peter G. Peterson Foundation:
- High and rising federal debt matters because it reduces the county’s flexibility to plan for and respond to urgent crises.
- Debt matters because growing interest costs make it harder to invest in our future — to build and sustain infrastructure, enhance education and support an economy that creates job growth and rising wages.
- Debt matters because it threatens the safety net — critical programs like Social Security, Medicaid, Medicare, SNAP and Unemployment Compensation are essential lifelines for the most vulnerable populations.
- Debt matters because America faces emerging and ongoing challenges that will require fiscal resources to keep the country safe, secure and strong — challenges like socioeconomic injustice, climate change, affordable health care, wealth and income inequality, international conflicts and an increasingly complex and competitive global economy.
- Debt matters because the nation should care about its children and grandchildren. Borrowing more and more today reduces the opportunities and prosperity of the next generation.
The U.S. faces a range of complex, unprecedented health, economic and societal challenges, set against the backdrop of a poor fiscal outlook that was irresponsible and unsustainable before the crisis.
Building a brighter future for the next generation must become an essential priority for America, and the high cost of this health and economic crisis only makes that challenge more urgent. Once America has emerged from the pandemic, it will be more important than ever for its elected leaders to address the unsustainable fiscal outlook and manage the burgeoning national debt, to ensure that America is more prepared, better positioned for growth, and able to meet its moral obligation to future generations.
Interest on the #NationalDebt will become the fastest growing part of the federal budget. https://t.co/6UZd8vy5N0
— Peterson Foundation (@pgpfoundation) March 10, 2021
References:
- https://www.cbo.gov/publication/57038
- https://www.fidelity.com/learning-center/personal-finance/government-spending-2021?ccsource=email_weekly
- https://www.pgpf.org/what-does-the-national-debt-mean-for-americas-future
* The Peter G. Peterson Foundation is a non-profit, non-partisan organization that is dedicated to increasing public awareness of the nature and urgency of key fiscal challenges threatening America’s future, and to accelerating action on them. To address these challenges successfully, we work to bring Americans together to find and implement sensible, long-term solutions that transcend age, party lines and ideological divides in order to achieve real results.