Beyond the Debt Conspiracy: What we need to be bothering about
Several readers have commented on my yesterday’s post (“USD, Gold, Crypto and a mountain of $38trn debt”). Some agree that the “debt manipulation” theory was far-fetched, others argued that I was underplaying the seriousness of America’s fiscal overhang. Both reactions are valid. My intent, however, was not to trivialize the US debt issue, but to put it in its proper context — and to focus attention on the much larger transitions now underway in the global financial order. I would like to elaborate to convey my point in the right perspective. The Debt Problem Is Real — but Not New The US federal debt now stands around $38 trillion, or roughly 120% of GDP. That sounds alarming, but the ratio has hovered near that level for over a decade. The composition, though, has changed dramatically. After the dotcom bust, debt piled up in corporate and household balance sheets. After Lehman, it migrated to banks. Post-Covid, it has firmly shifted to the sovereign. In essence, the debt hasn’t disapp...