Balance Owed: Federal Debt and Deficits
Report from Renewing America
Report from Renewing America

Balance Owed: Federal Debt and Deficits

Progress Report and Scorecard

February 2016 , 11 Pages

Report

Overview

How America Stacks Up: Economic Competitiveness and U.S. Policy compiles all eight Progress Reports and Scorecards from CFR's Renewing America initiative in a single digital collection. Explore the book and download an enhanced ebook for your preferred device. 

Edward Alden

Bernard L. Schwartz Senior Fellow

The U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio has nearly grown to the Group of Seven (G7) average, a dramatic increase from 2000 when it was lower than most other G7 countries, according to this new progress report and scorecard from the Council on Foreign Relations Renewing America initiative. At its current rate, the U.S. debt-to-GDP ratio will be higher than all G7 countries except Japan by 2040.

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Budget, Debt, and Deficits

Competitiveness

United States

While other large wealthy countries have been cutting their entitlement programs, the United States has left Medicare and Social Security mostly untouched. Recent U.S. budget cuts have instead focused on discretionary spending, which goes toward areas such as education, infrastructure, and research and development—all of which constitute investments in future economic growth.

Debt Scorecard

"By 2040, public debt is projected to top 110 percent, equal to the highest levels reached during the Second World War," Renewing America Associate Director Rebecca Strauss writes. "And absent any policy changes it will likely keep climbing afterward into uncharted territory for the United States."

Americans will have to make difficult choices to get the public debt load under control. Sequestration, which took effect in 2013, only affected government spending projected to decline as a share of GDP. Meanwhile, U.S. policymakers left cutting entitlements or increasing tax revenues largely off the table, despite the fact that entitlements will account for nearly all new federal spending in the future.

"Just to slow debt growth to the rate of GDP growth (or a steady debt-to-GDP ratio) from today through 2040, changes to current policy would have to be dramatic: cut entitlements by 10 percent, cut discretionary spending by 24 percent, increase tax revenue by 6 percent, or some combination of the three," Strauss notes. "Adjustments to actually lower the debt-to-GDP ratio would be even more painful."

More on:

Budget, Debt, and Deficits

Competitiveness

United States

Read Strauss's op-ed on the report's findings on Quartz.

This scorecard is part of CFR's Renewing America initiative, which generates innovative policy recommendations on revitalizing the U.S. economy and replenishing the sources of American power abroad. Scorecards provide analysis and infographics assessing policy developments and U.S. performance in such areas as infrastructure, education, international trade, and government deficits. The initiative is supported in part by a generous grant from the Bernard and Irene Schwartz Foundation.

Download the scorecard [PDF].

Table of Contents

Click on a chapter title below to view and download each Progress Report and Scorecard.

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