America's Fiscal Future (2024)

Overview

The Nation’s Unsustainable Fiscal Path

The federal government faces an unsustainable fiscal future. In February 2024, we released our annual reporton the nation’s fiscal health, highlighting both short-term and long-term risks.

Federal debt held by the public (that is, the total amount of money that the federal government owes to its investors) will continue to grow faster than the economy, which is unsustainable.

Federal debt held by the public -- past, present, and future.

America's Fiscal Future (1)

Historically, debt has decreased during peacetime and economic expansions. But this pattern has changed in recent decades. Unless current revenue and spending policies change, by 2028 debt will reach its historical high of 106 percent of GDP, according to our simulation. If unaddressed, it will grow more than twice as fast as the economy and reach 200 percent of GDP by 2050.

Why Is This a Problem?

The growing debt could create additional challenges for federal fiscal management, which could in turn cause challenges for American households and individuals, too. These potential challenges include:

  • Risks to economic growth and lower investment in the private sector. These issues could lead to lower wages due to losses in productivity.
  • Upward pressure on interest rates that would make it more expensive for individuals to borrow money—for example to purchase a car or home.

These challenges may intensify over time if unaddressed.You can learn more about thecurrent financial condition here.

Why Is It Happening?

The debt is growing because the country keeps borrowing to finance an increasingly large gap between government spending and revenue.

The underlying conditions of the problem have existed for over two decades. Every fiscal year since 2002, the federal government has run a deficit—meaning spending exceeds its revenues—and added to its debt.

Tracking program spending and revenue over time

Image

America's Fiscal Future (2)

Demographic and other trends are contributing to the problem. The U.S. population is aging and health care costs are rising. These trends put pressure on Social Security and Medicare programs—both of which have seen declines in their trust fund balances. And deficits could increase even more as higher interest rates combine with rising debt.

Another contributor to rising debt is the interest payments the federal government owes to its investors. In fiscal year 2023, federal net interest spending increased 39 percent from fiscal year 2022 (from $475 billion to $659 billion). The increase is driven in part by higher interest rates. Starting in 2029, we project the federal government will pay more than $1 trillion in net interest costs every year.

What’s the Solution?

Congress should develop a long-term fiscal plan to provide a cohesive picture of the government’s fiscal goals and a road map for achieving them.

A fiscal plan could establish fiscal rules that impose long-lasting numerical limits on the budget. The plan could also establish fiscal targets to help manage debt. Our report identifies key considerations for the design, implementation, and enforcement of fiscal rules and targets.

How Does GAO Help?

Fiscal simulation. We update this simulation each year to monitor the government’s long-term fiscal outlook. We also analyze the drivers of debt and the trends contributing to it. Find the details inour annual fiscal health report.

Debt sensitivity analysis. This analysis can give policymakers a more complete picture of how potential economic and fiscal changes to the variables in our simulation can affect the fiscal outlook. You can explore the effects of different variables on the debt inour interactive graphic.

Fiscal gap sensitivity analysis. The fiscal gap is a way of quantifying the policy changes required to meet a given target debt ratio. It measures how much primary deficits must be reduced through policy changes (some combination of revenue increases or spending cuts) over a period of time. Explore the variables that affect the fiscal gapin our interactive fiscal gap calculator.

America's Fiscal Future (2024)

FAQs

Is the US in a fiscal deficit? ›

The federal government has spent $1.20 trillion more than it has collected in fiscal year (FY) 2024, resulting in a national deficit. Fiscal year-to-date (since October 2023) total updated monthly using the Monthly Treasury Statement (MTS) dataset.

How much does the US owe China? ›

China (Mainland)

China is the U.S.'s second-largest foreign creditor, owing more than $1 trillion of U.S. debt. With 1.4 billion people, the world's second-largest economy and rapid economic growth, mainland China is an undisputed economic powerhouse [source: World Bank].

Has the 2024 federal budget passed? ›

Washington, D.C. – Today, by a vote of 75-22, the U.S. Senate passed the six-bill Fiscal Year 2024 (FY24) appropriations package.

Who does the US owe the most money to? ›

Nearly half of all US foreign-owned debt comes from five countries.
Country/territoryUS foreign-owned debt (January 2023)
Japan$1,104,400,000,000
China$859,400,000,000
United Kingdom$668,300,000,000
Belgium$331,100,000,000
6 more rows

Which country has the highest fiscal deficit? ›

Instead, the following list is occupied with states that have found themselves geographically isolated, ravaged by war or under the jackboot of authoritarian rule.
  1. 1 – Timor-Leste (75.7% of GDP) ...
  2. 2 – Kiribati (64.1% of GDP) ...
  3. 3 – Venezuela (46.1% of GDP) ...
  4. 4 – Libya (25.1% of GDP) ...
  5. 5 – Brunei (17.3% of GDP)

Why is the US deficit a worry again and will remain so? ›

The US has recorded annual surpluses only six times since 1960, the last in fiscal 2001. A chronic challenge is America's aging population: As more people retire, the government has to shell out more in Social Security pension payments and Medicare health benefits. But the situation was exacerbated by two emergencies.

Who owns most of the U.S. debt? ›

Top Foreign Owners of US National Debt
  • Japan. $1,153.1. 14.37%
  • China. $797.7. 9.94%
  • United Kingdom. $753.5. 9.39%
  • Luxembourg. $376.5. 4.69%
  • Canada. $339.8. 4.23%

What country is in the most debt? ›

Japan has the highest percentage of national debt in the world at 259.43% of its annual GDP.

What country owns most of the United States? ›

Which countries own the most land in the U.S.?
  • CANADA. 31%
  • Other. 28%
  • NETHERLANDS. 12%
  • ITALY. 7%
  • UNITED KINGDOM. 6%
  • GERMANY. 6%
  • PORTUGAL. 3.6%
  • FRANCE. 3.2%
Mar 29, 2024

Is the government shutting down in 2024? ›

President Joe Biden on Saturday signed a $460 billion package of spending bills approved by the Senate in time to avoid a shutdown of many key federal agencies. The legislation's success gets lawmakers about halfway home in wrapping up their appropriations work for the 2024 budget year.

What is fiscal year 2025? ›

FY2024: October 1, 2023–September 28, 2024 (52 weeks, or 364 days) FY2025: September 29, 2024–September 27, 2025 (52 weeks, or 364 days) FY2026: September 28, 2025–September 26, 2026 (52 weeks, or 364 days) FY2027: September 27, 2026–September 25, 2027 (52 weeks, or 364 days)

What's in the 1.2 trillion spending bill? ›

Today's package includes six bills: Defense; State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs; Financial Services and General Government; Labor, Health and Human Services and Education (Labor-HHS); Homeland Security; and the Legislative Branch.

Which country has no debt? ›

The 20 countries with the lowest national debt in 2023 in relation to gross domestic product (GDP)
CharacteristicNational debt in relation to GDP
Macao SAR0%
Brunei Darussalam2.33%
Kuwait3.18%
Turkmenistan4.7%
9 more rows
6 days ago

Will the US ever pay off its debt? ›

Eliminating the U.S. government's debt is a Herculean task that could take decades. In addition to obvious steps, such as hiking taxes and slashing spending, the government could take a number of other approaches, some of them unorthodox and even controversial.

How can the US get out of debt? ›

  1. Bonds. Using Debt to Pay Debt. ...
  2. Interest Rates. Maintaining interest rates at low levels can help stimulate the economy, generate tax revenue, and, ultimately, reduce the national debt. ...
  3. Spending Cuts. From 1921 to 1974, the President led the government budgeting process. ...
  4. Raising Taxes. ...
  5. Bailout or Default.

Is the US current account deficit or surplus? ›

Current-Account Deficit Narrows in 2023. The U.S. current-account deficit, which reflects the combined balances on trade in goods and services and income flows between U.S. residents and residents of other countries, narrowed by $152.8 billion, or 15.7 percent, to $818.8 billion in 2023.

Why is the US deficit so high? ›

One of the main culprits is consistently overspending. When the federal government spends more than its budget, it creates a deficit. In the fiscal year of 2023, it spent about $381 billion more than it collected in revenues. To pay that deficit, the government borrows money.

What is the current U.S. national debt? ›

What is the national debt? The national debt ($34.68 T) is the total amount of outstanding borrowing by the U.S. Federal Government accumulated over the nation's history. Updated daily from the Debt to the Penny dataset.

Why is US debt to GDP so high? ›

Much of the rise in the national debt is attributable to an aging population, said Rouse, with 18% of the population over 65 today, up from 12% in 1983. As the baby boom generation has entered retirement, the amount the government spends on services like Social Security and Medicaid has risen.

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