How Big Is the Long-Term Debt Problem?
By James Kwak
Articles about the deficits and the national debt generally talk
about unsustainable long-term deficits that will drive the national debt
up to a level where scary things happen. Sensible commentators usually
acknowledge that our current deficits are a sideshow and the real
problems happen in the 2020s and 2030s due to modestly increasing Social
Security outlays and rapidly increasing health care spending. I admit
that this has generally been my line as well; for example, in a previous post
I said that the ten-year deficit problem is entirely a product of
extending the Bush tax cuts, but that even if we let them expire things
will get worse over the next two decades.
But looking at the numbers, it’s not clear that the long-term picture
is really that bad. Here I’ll lay out the numbers, and then, as they
say on Fox News, you can decide.
Saturday, October 8, 2011
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