« First « Previous Comments 41 - 53 of 53 Search these comments
To me I tell people debt is going to grow every year until 2076
Do you have any idea where the debt would sit in relation to GDP if it were to continue to double it every 8 yrs until 2076?
unless it creates inflation we should be fine, hence why debt has grown and interest rates has fallen
On the opposite: unless it creates inflation, we're fucked.
We can't afford to accumulate debt at this rate with much lower nominal growth.
unless it creates inflation,
Hence why King Dollar is very important... America is simply just a economic freak of nature in historical context.
Debt should rise a lot faster than GDP due to demographics since debt is highly loaded on the mandatory side of things 2024-2057 that is high debt cycle here in America
Debt should rise a lot faster than GDP due to demographics since debt is highly loaded on the mandatory side of things 2024-2057 that is high debt cycle here in America
The current trend of x2/8yrs started with Reagan, therefore it is NOT (just) demographics.
If debt is ~ 20 trillions end of 2016, assuming +9% a year (as the case on average since Reagan), for 40 yrs until 2057, this puts the debt at $628 Trillions in 2057.
Do you wish to say this is a workable number?
$628 Trillions in 2057.
Is this a real assumption I have 75 Trillion being the worst case... because the mandatory side from 2024-2056 will make all recession create a higher debt flow due to a lack a revenue
Is this a real assumption I have 75 Trillion being the worst case...
20T x (1.09)^40 = 628 T
Obviously projecting a trend for 40 yrs is more a thought experiment than a prediction, but it serves its purpose.
I think you're forgetting the revenue aspect
You mean that revenue growing 2%/yr (increasingly looking more like 1%)?
Do you really want me to do the math?
Do you really want me to do the math?
As someone who has studied government debt and revenue models, lets just say your math is suspect if you believe government debt will go from 20 Trillion to 628 Trillion
As someone who has studied government debt and revenue models, lets just say your math is suspect if you believe government debt will go from 20 Trillion to 628 Trillion
I'm just projecting a simple exponential trend. Are you saying we are not on this trend now, or that the trend will change at some point.
I certainly agree it will change. Which underlies the fact we can't simply say "things are great, we'll just go through a period of high debt".
Which underlies the fact we can't simply say "things are great, we'll just go through a period of high debt".
Due to demographics we will never see a surplus probably in our life time, the only really shot was between 2016-2017, that didn't happen.
However, since it's majority of mandatory payouts, I see no problem with high federal government debt loads when you have the reserve currency
If anything, we don't do enough government
spending
If anything, we don't do enough government
spending
There should be more "Republicans" like you, Logan.
I see no problem with high federal government debt loads when you have the reserve currency
There is a fine line between "high debt load" and a $628 Trillions load.
The Fed rate hike is in limbo again, as predicted. As long as they keep zirping or nirping asset prices will stay inflated.
« First « Previous Comments 41 - 53 of 53 Search these comments
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2016-09-02/a-storm-is-brewing-in-global-financial-markets
Global growth is weak, and will be eroded further by Brexit. Oil prices are low, and likely to plunge further. The world has excess capacity and a wage-depressing labor surplus. Corporate profits are shaky. And deflation is laying bare the impotence of central banks. So where would you logically expect financial markets to be going, given that economic, financial and political environment?
#LogansSwan