The US national debt has reached a terrible new record

A short history of the US national debt
The US national debt is over $34 trillion
America started with a lot of debt
The revolution cost $75 million
Reaching zero under Andrew Jackson
The Civil War and ballooning debt
Surpassing $1 billion in debt
The ballooning debt problem
The Cold War was expensive
Turning away from managing the debt
Jump $10 trillion in a few years
How big is $34 trillion dollars?
What each American owe in 2022
Does the national debt matter?
A few of the problems it can cause
A truly depression achievement
Hitting $50 trillion by 2023
A short history of the US national debt

The United States government’s debt reached a concerning new record high at the end of 2023. But just how bad is it and does having tens of trillions in debt even matter for a country as economically powerful as the US?

The US national debt is over $34 trillion

On December 29th, the US Treasury Department published new data showing that the country’s national debt pushed above $34 trillion dollars for the first time in history. But how much do you really know about the debt?

America started with a lot of debt

The US national debt is the amount of outstanding money that the federal government has borrowed in order to fund its various programs according to CNN, but the national debt has always been a factor in the country. 

The revolution cost $75 million

Public debt is a fact of life. The US has had debt since its inception,” reads a statement from the Treasury Department's website about the national debt. Records reveal that the revolution put the US over $75 million in debt. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By John Trumbull - US Capitol

Reaching zero under Andrew Jackson

The country’s national debt grew in the years after the revolution but there was a point in US history where the federal government’s debt was brought to zero. That occurred under President Andrew Jackson back in 1835. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Ralph Eleaser Whiteside Earl

The Civil War and ballooning debt

However, America’s national debt quickly ballooned in the years after it was brought to zero with the most notable expansion happening during the Civil War. Prior to the fight, the US national debt was roughly $60 million. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Kurz and Allison - Library of Congress

Surpassing $1 billion in debt

By 1862, the national debt surpassed $1 billion dollars and by the end of the Civil War, it had topped out at $2.7 billion. The debt continued to grow into the twentieth century and by the Second World War it hit $50 billion.  

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Unknown U.S. Army photographer

The ballooning debt problem

Following the war, the United States government was in $260 billion dollars of debt and the rest of the century saw the national debt closely track inflation and rise. The largest jump occurred between 1980 and 1990. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Series: Reagan White House Photographs

The Cold War was expensive

The country’s national debt more than tripled before it began shrinking following the end of the Cold War. However, the war on terror and subsequent invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq pushed the debt to roughly $10.6 trillion dollars by 2008. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By U.S. Navy photo by Photographer Mate 3rd Class Juan E. Diaz

Turning away from managing the debt

In the period between 2008 and today, the debt has grown increasingly worse as the country’s leaders have turned away from finding more sustainable ways to manage the national debt in favor of other policies. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Official White House Photo by Pete Souza

Jump $10 trillion in a few years

According to the market research firm Statista, the US national debt reached $20 trillion dollars in 2017 under the leadership of Donald Trump and pushed past $30 trillion in 2022 under the presidency of Joe Biden. 

How big is $34 trillion dollars?

Today, the national debt has reached $34 trillion but that number probably doesn’t mean much since it is so large that it can’t be properly comprehended. A better way to look at the problem is to divide the debt by US citizens. 

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Wikideas1 - Own Work

What each American owe in 2022

For example, in 2022, when the national debt sat at roughly $30 trillion. The per capita cost to each and every American was $92,582.46. That’s how much each citizen would owe to pay off the national debt in full. 

Does the national debt matter?

In some senses, the national debt does matter. For example, if the debt begins to exceed government revenue by too much, then the debt could become unsustainable, which would create a lot of major problems. 

A few of the problems it can cause

Some of the problems would include higher interest costs, fewer economic opportunities for Americans, a hit to the country’s social safety net, and less of an ability to respond to crises according to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation.  

Photo Credit: Wiki Commons By Spc. Joseph A. Wilson

A truly depression achievement

Reaching $34 trillion in debt was a “truly depressing achievement” said President of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget Maya MacGuineas. “Though our level of debt is dangerous for both our economy and for national security, America just cannot stop borrowing.”

Hitting $50 trillion by 2023

In November 2023, Bank of America used data from the Congressional Budget Office to estimate that the US national debt could reach over $50 trillion dollars by 2033, though only time will tell if the prediction becomes a reality. 

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