For decades, both Democrats and Republicans have used inflammatory words like “dangerous” and “unsustainable” to describe the national debt. But the truth is, the debt is not so scary.
Despite what it sounds like, the national debt is basically a scorecard that keeps track of how much money the federal government has put into the economy over the centuries. When the government spends on things like health care, infrastructure, education, and the military, it’s putting money into the hands of companies and workers in these industries, whose hiring and spending in turn helps other parts of the economy to the benefit of us all. By increasing the national debt, the government is essentially adding money to our pockets.
Those who worry about the national debt say it’ll put a burden on future generations. But the federal budget is nothing like a household budget: The government can’t run out of money because it issues the U.S. dollar. So it can always pay its bills, no matter how big they get. Occasionally, during political debates in Congress, lawmakers threaten not to pay, but they always pay in the end because a default would cause catastrophic damage to the global economy. For a currency-issuing government like the U.S., bankruptcy is impossible.