Fortune | FORTUNE 12小时前
The U.S. debt outlook is so dire it now resembles the student loan crisis, former White House economic adviser says
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前白宫经济顾问贾里德·伯恩斯坦警告称,美国若维持当前财政轨迹,或将面临债务冲击。文章指出,美国债务增长速度超过经济增长,类似于学生贷款困境。自2000年以来,美国联邦学生贷款债务翻倍,总额增长超四倍。同时,由于疫情期间的政府支出和通货膨胀,利率上升,使得债务可持续性面临挑战。文章还提及,特朗普的经济政策可能加剧这一问题,并建议国会预先制定应对措施,以避免政府被迫削减开支或增税。

⚠️ 伯恩斯坦认为,美国目前的财政状况类似于不可持续的学生贷款模式,即债务增长速度超过经济增长。他援引经济学家奥利维尔·布兰查德的研究,指出当GDP增长快于债务利息时,政府可以维持预算赤字。

📈 文章强调,自2000年以来,美国联邦学生贷款债务总额从3870亿美元增加到1.8万亿美元,增长速度超过任何其他类型的家庭债务。这与美国政府的债务情况类似,高债务可能导致严重的后果,例如工资被扣押和信用评分下降。

💡 伯恩斯坦警告说,由于疫情期间的政府支出和通货膨胀,导致利率上升,使得债务可持续性面临挑战。他提到了美国财政部10年期国债的通胀调整收益率与经济增长预测之间的关系。在过去,收益率低于经济增长预测,但最近两者趋于一致,这给债务可持续性带来了潜在的风险。

🏛️ 文章还提到了特朗普政府的经济政策,特别是贸易战和减税措施,这些政策可能导致经济增长放缓、通货膨胀加剧、以及债务增加。伯恩斯坦建议国会预先制定“紧急应对措施”,以避免政府被迫大幅削减开支或增税。

The U.S. is inviting a debt shock if it continues on its current trajectory, which is starting to look like unsustainable student loans, according to Jared Bernstein, who previously served as the chair of President Joe Biden’s Council of Economic Advisers.

In a New York Times op-ed on Wednesday, he acknowledged that he was once a longtime dove when it came to budget deficits and previously argued that fiscal austerity often does more harm than good.

“No longer. I, like many other longtime doves, am joining the hawks, because our nation’s budget math just got a lot more dangerous,” Bernstein wrote.

In particular, he pointed to the math around economic growth versus debt interest. Governments can sustain budget deficits if GDP expands faster than the interest rate on their debt, Bernstein explained, citing research from economist Olivier Blanchard.

That’s where the student debt analogy comes in. College graduates can keep up with monthly payments as long as they haven’t borrowed too much and their income is rising faster than their loan bills.

“Conversely, though, if they borrowed to the hilt—and if their student loan debt starts growing faster than their income—they can quickly get in trouble,” Bernstein said. “And that’s where our country is right now.”

It’s an ominous warning given that delinquency rates have soared among student loan borrowers, resulting in seized wages and credit scores plummeting.

That’s after the number of Americans with debt from federal student loans more than doubled from 21 million to 45 million between 2000 and 2020, according to the Brookings Institution. Meanwhile, the total amount owed more than quadrupled from $387 billion to $1.8 trillion during that time, growing faster than any other form of household debt.

When it comes to the federal government’s finances, America’s debt costs relative to income used to be more benign. Since the early 2000s, the inflation-adjusted yield on 10-year Treasuries was below the running 10-year forecast for economic growth.

But that changed recently, with the two now converging at just above 2%, due in part to government spending during the pandemic and higher inflation—which forced the Federal Reserve to hike interest rates aggressively, dragging yields higher.

“That’s a potential game changer for debt sustainability,” Bernstein said.

He didn’t mention that the Biden administration added trillions to the debt with expansive spending that also stoked inflation.

Instead, he pointed to President Donald Trump’s economic policies, namely his trade war and the tax-and-spending bill that he signed into law last week.

High tariff rates will lower economic growth while boosting inflation and interest rates. At the same time, tax cuts will increase debt and likely to raise the interest costs for servicing it, he added.

To help avoid a debt shock that forces the government to precipitously slash spending or raise taxes, Bernstein suggested Congress pre-determine “break-glass moments” and binding fiscal responses.

The U.S. already pays more in interest on its debt than it spends on Medicare and defense. Those interest payments will hit $1 trillion next year, trailing only Social Security as the government’s biggest outlay, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a think tank.

Meanwhile, Trump’s tax cuts and spending are expected to add trillions to the deficit in the coming years, with the total debt-to-GDP ratio surpassing the post-Word War II record soon.

“But that path remains unsustainable: The primary deficit is much larger than usual in a strong economy, the debt-to-GDP ratio is approaching the postwar high, and much higher real interest rates have put the debt and interest expense as a share of GDP on much steeper trajectories than appeared likely last cycle,” Goldman Sachs said in a note last month.

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美国债务 财政风险 经济增长 学生贷款
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