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Can the United States 'Grow' Its Way Out of Debt?

• by Joseph Solis-Mullen

Many policymakers and commentators today point back at this period as proof that economic growth and sound fiscal policies can solve America's current debt crisis. But can we really "grow our way out" of today's $36.4 trillion national debt the way we did after the war?

The numbers suggest otherwise.

The drop in debt-to-GDP following World War II was driven by several key factors:

Rapid economic growth: The post-war economic boom saw GDP growth rates averaging 4% annually from 1945 to 1970, fueled by industrial expansion, a young workforce, and global demand for American goods.
High inflation: Inflation averaged around 7% annually from 1945 to 1955, effectively eroding the real value of the outstanding war debt.
Demographic tailwinds: The post-war baby boom and workforce expansion contributed to a broadening tax base and rising productivity.
Lower peacetime spending: War expenditures ceased, and although Cold War military spending was significant, it was far lower than the cost of World War II, and Dwight Eisenhower's administration especially succeeded in running the warfare/welfare state much more cheaply.
Today's fiscal and economic environment is vastly different, making a repeat of this post-war debt reduction unlikely. The current debt load, spending commitments, and slower economic growth mean that simply waiting for GDP to outpace debt is unrealistic—the problem, in short, is structural.

The current U.S. economic and fiscal landscape looks as follows:

$36.4 trillion national debt
$27.36 trillion GDP
2.5% annual GDP growth (adjusted, past decade)
$1.8 trillion 2024 budget deficit
5.4% of GDP as the projected 2030 deficit
$4.5 trillion annual tax revenue
2.5% inflation rate (as adjusted CPI)
Given these figures, I ran several scenarios to determine what it would take to eliminate the national debt.1

One way to reduce the debt burden is through higher economic growth. However, even with aggressive growth assumptions (up to 15% annually), the debt continues to rise due to persistent deficits. There is no realistic economic growth rate that can singularly eliminate the debt within a practical timeframe.

If the government were to cut spending and increase revenues to generate a budget surplus, it would need to achieve a $2.5 trillion annual surplus instead of the current $1.8 trillion deficit. Under these conditions, it would take fourteen years to eliminate the debt. However, achieving such a surplus would require drastic spending cuts or tax increases, both of which are politically improbable.

1 Comments in Response to

Comment by dreamer
Entered on:

Before 1933, FRNotes identified the Federal Reserve book-entry credit was redeemable in Gold or in Lawful Money. The bogus legislation of 31 USC #462 identified the FRNs as a Legal Tender --i.e., a debt of the public. Fraudulent legislation is void from its inception and the Rothschild Fed is responsible for $36 T.



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