How The US Is Quietly Erasing The $39 Trillion National Debt
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THE NATIONAL DEBT
The United States now owes nearly $40 trillion, is on pace to reach roughly $50 trillion by 2030, and is adding about $6 billion in debt every day. But the real problem is not just the debt itself, it is the interest. When rates were near zero, the government could borrow heavily without much pain. Now that rates are higher, interest costs are skyrocketing, creating what many call a debt spiral.
THREE WAYS OUT
When a government has this much debt, there are only three realistic paths: austerity, default, or inflation. Austerity means tax hikes and spending cuts, but that is politically almost impossible because it would require painful cuts to programs like Social Security, Medicare, and defense. Default would be catastrophic because U.S. Treasuries are the foundation of the global financial system. That leaves the third option: slowly shrinking the debt through inflation.
INFLATION SOLUTION
If the government pays 2.5% interest while inflation runs at 6%, the real value of the debt shrinks by 3.5% per year. The debt technically remains, but its burden becomes smaller. This is how governments can quietly reduce debt without officially defaulting or admitting that savers are absorbing the cost.
FINANCIAL REPRESSION
The U.S. used this playbook after World II. Debt reached roughly 106% of GDP, and instead of paying it down through responsible budgeting, the government kept interest rates artificially low while inflation ran higher. Treasury bills were pegged at 0.375%, long-term bonds at 2.5%, and inflation at times reached double digits. Savers and bondholders earned negative real returns, while the national debt was inflated away over time.
THE FED STRATEGY
Kevin Warsh’s plan is centered on shrinking the Fed’s balance sheet. Warsh argues that the Fed’s massive balance sheet has distorted markets, made investors nervous about future money printing, and created an inflation risk premium. His theory is that a smaller, more disciplined Fed could rebuild trust and eventually lower long-term rates naturally.
USING AI
Warsh also appears to be betting that AI could increase economic growth without creating as much inflation. If productivity rises fast enough, the economy could grow while inflation stays controlled, making it easier to reduce the debt burden over time. But this only works if investors trust the Fed, buy the bonds the Fed no longer wants, and believe inflation will stay under control. If that confidence breaks, interest rates could spike and the debt problem could get worse.
MOVING INFLATION DATA
The video also argues that inflation data can be shaped by methodology changes. CPI uses substitution, meaning if steak gets too expensive and people buy chicken instead, the inflation calculation can show a lower cost increase. Hedonic adjustments also reduce measured inflation when products become more expensive but are considered higher quality. These methods are not necessarily fake, but they can make official inflation feel lower than what people experience in real life.
THE FUTURE
The most likely outcome is a combination of higher taxes, more money printing, and low real interest rates. Taxes may rise through higher brackets, more Social Security taxes, higher capital gains taxes, or fewer loopholes. At the same time, the government may quietly keep rates below inflation, allowing debt to shrink in real terms while savers lose purchasing power.
HOW TO PREPARE
The biggest risk is sitting on too much cash and assuming it will hold its value over the next decade. That does not mean panic buying or making an extreme bet, but it does mean understanding that inflation quietly transfers wealth from savers to borrowers. The better approach is to stay invested, stay diversified, avoid holding too much idle cash, and own assets that have historically had a better chance of keeping up with inflation, including stocks, real estate, commodities, gold, or Bitcoin.
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