Total U.S. Debt Surpasses $19 Trillion; Rises $8.4 Trillion Under President Obama
1
February, 2016
Two
months ago, when
we calculated that
the US would need a new "debt ceiling" of $19.6 trillion to
last until after Obama's tenure, we may have been too optimistic:
since the increase in the hard debt limit of $18.15 trillion which
was raised at the end of October, the US appears to be growing its
debt at a far faster pace than we had originally expected, and
according to the latest public debt data, as of the last day of
January, total
US debt just hit 19,012,827,698,417.93.
This
means that if the nominal US GDP as of December 31 which was $18.12
trillion grows at the 1.2% rate expected by the Atlanta Fed, total
debt to GDP is now on pace to hit 105% at the next GDP tabulation,
and rising fast from there.
It
also means that since his inauguration in January 2009, the US debt
has now risen by a whopping 78.9%, or $8.4 trillion. It was $10.6
trillion when Obama came into office.
Indicatively,
the Congressional Budget Office forecasts that the national debt will
hit $22.6 trillion by 2020 and will rise to $29.3 trillion by 2026.
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