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18 results for “government debt”
debt
government debt
...government debt was 20,000,000,000,000 and GDP was just 21,000,000,000,000. So since the pandemic, federal government debt has risen by 80% while GDP's climbed 38%. And steady inflation from the large stimulus of money from both central banks and the
...US government debt is a 0% risk gauge. There's no risk in the near term. The economy seems fairly balanced. But over the long term, your risk gauge is a 100%. And then you follow that up with an analysis of the central bank, and you say the central b
Can I ask about government debt? Because this is the other thing that, you know, people have been talking about for a very, very long time, high deficits, especially in the developed world. I think the highest level of debt since, like, World War two
...US government debt, assuming we take on no new debt, which we know is not the case, $39,000,000,000,000 of debt outstanding, the federal government level today, and it got to get refinanced at this rate, we would have an incremental annual cost to se
“US debt explodes to $56 trillion by 2036 - here's how bad it gets”
...debt to GDP. House committee on budget expects it to be a 135%, so slightly up in 2036. For comparison, Japan is 237, Singapore, a 176, Venezuela, a 164. The Greeks, one fifty four, UK, 94. Twenty yea
...debt we have. It tells you very little about risk. What tells you about risk is if the ten year yield rises persistently above the level of our nominal GDP growth, that's what would get me worried. But the incremental $10,000,000,000 of of public deb
...government debt. A company probably wouldn't think about its debt by comparing its debt to its earnings. It would probably be much more likely to compare its debt service to its cash flow or to compare its debt to the market value of its equity. And
...to government debt, there there really isn't, a comparison. So it's certainly before the GFC, the big growth was in the credit of the private sector, especially in the form of mortgages. But after that, what we've seen is credit to the private sector
...have government debts. So, you know, debts extended by France, Germany, The United States, typically for export encouragement, and then commercial debts. And that can be bonds, bank loans, and these various other sorts of things. They all rank equall
...debt levels. And, certainly, you know, other things equal, it implies that sovereign issuers, including The US, are more risky than they were before. And so you could say, well, maybe there should be a pricing of sovereign risk and a should be a stee
...that the government has to issue more debt and it quickly gets away from you. There is a non linear relationship between the deficit and interest rates which drives up the debt problem in a non linear way and it gets away from you and you can't fix i
...of debt to GDP. But if everybody is there, nothing really changes that much. The real question is if one country is able to decouple itself and its economic output is so meaningfully different than everybody else's. So my first take on this whole deb
...debt is equal to GDP. We're running deficits at 7% of GDP and the economy has kind of grown at one, two, little north of 2%. So the debt is growing faster as a result of the imbalance in the federal budget where deficits are growing at the rate of se
...debt service. And that's like plaque in that it leaves less room for spending. So for example, the US government has, an interest bill that's, about a trillion dollars a year. And if they didn't have a trillion fed didn't have that interest bill, the
...debt on top of that pile of debt, So it's not just the existing debt that's a problem, but you have to add more debt sales, which equals, essentially, the budget deficit, which now is gonna be about seven and a half percent of GDP. You've gotta sell
...is growing faster as a result of the imbalance in the federal budget where deficits are growing at the rate of seven percent of GDP, which means the debt's growing at the rate of 7% of GDP, where our debt is growing now faster than GDP and is becomin
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