
News Link • Government Debt & Financing
Think Uncle Sam Owes $37 Trillion? It's Far Worse Than That
• https://www.zerohedge.com, Via Brian McGlincheyAs distressing as that official number is, America's true fiscal situation is even worse — far worse. According to a barely-publicized Treasury report, the actual grand total of Uncle Sam's obligations is more than $151 trillion.
That huge discrepancy springs from the fact that the federal government doesn't hold itself to the same accounting standards it imposes on businesses. Rather than using accrual accounting — which recognizes expenses when they're incurred — our Washington overlords self-servingly use simple cash accounting, only recognizing expenses when they're paid. As a result, discourse on federal obligations solely focuses on the national debt, comprising Treasury bills, notes and bonds.
Once a year, however, an obscure report delivers a more accurate version of Uncle Sam's balance sheet. While it receives almost no attention from journalists or public officials, the Treasury Department is required to submit an annual report to Congress detailing the government's financial condition. Critically, the 1994 law compelling this report mandates that it reflect "unfunded liabilities" — that is, commitments made without any dedicated assets or income streams to ensure they'll be kept.
One of the larger categories of those unfunded liabilities is future federal employee and veterans benefits. At the end of the 2024 fiscal year, this alone represented a $15 trillion obligation. However, by leaps and bounds, the largest unfunded liabilities spring from America's social insurance obligations — primarily Social Security and Medicare. At fiscal-year end, these liabilities totaled a towering $105.8 trillion.
Stacking these and other unfunded liabilities on top of the publicly-held national debt and other obligations, you arrive at a grand total of $151.3 trillion at the end of the 2024 fiscal year. Offsetting that by an estimated $7.9 trillion in US government commercial assets — including property, plant, equipment and purported gold holdings — a Just Facts analysis puts Uncle Sam at an overall net-negative $143 trillion.
Writing at the Heartland Institute, Just Facts president James Agresti put that nearly-incomprehensible total in perspective: "$143 trillion amounts to 85% of the net wealth Americans have accumulated since the nation's founding, estimated by the Federal Reserve to be $169 trillion. This includes all of their assets in savings, real estate, corporate stocks, private businesses, and even consumer durable goods like automobiles and furniture."
Those numbers reflected the government's position on Sept 30, 2024. They've not only grown significantly worse in the intervening months, they're deteriorating at a blistering pace even as you read this: Not even counting the unfunded liabilities that represent the biggest part of the problem, the national debt alone is increasing at something like $156 million per hour.
1 Comments in Response to Think Uncle Sam Owes $37 Trillion? It's Far Worse Than That
This whole picture is totally skewed. Any money that the government or anybody else borrows is ultimately borrowed from the Federal Reserve Bank. When you look at the ledgers, you will find that the supposed loans are really creations of new money... that the Fed keeps one way or another. This means that whatever debt there is owed to the borrower, personal or government, even though it looks like it is the other way around. The language in the banking laws makes it extremely difficult to see this. So the Fed helps us out with two out of print pamphlets, "Modern Money Mechanics" - https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffab&q=modern+money+mechanics&ia=web - and "Two faces of debt" - https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffab&q=two+faces+of+debt&ia=web . But screw your head on when reading, because the wording tries to say it while denying it.