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By ScottBittle on May 29th, 2009
There's no shortage of depressing numbers in the news today, but one set of numbers in particular deserves to be flagged. That's USA Today's assessment of how much the average American family owes thanks to our national debt. Thanks to the federal government's intense spending to stave off economic collapse, the average American household owes another $55,000, to a $546,668 share in the national debt and future obligations, according to the newspaper's calculations. But the bank bailouts and economic stimulus packages are only part of the problem. That's a short-term strategy, there don't seem to be any good alternatives, and as long as the economy turns around, we can get away with it. The outlook for Medicare and Social Security continues to get worse, and over the long term the federal budget remains unsustainable. Of course, the implications of the national debt are different than personal debt. No one's going to foreclose on the White House or send the repo men after Air Force One. But the federal government is overextended, just as lots of businesses and families have been. That could turn into the financial crisis after this one, unless we start taking this seriously. 1 comment on this entry |
Changing Expectations
»A new report finds the main problem in getting the public to deal with our fiscal problems isn't opposition to tax increases or spending cuts -- it's their lack of trust in the government to spend their money wisely. |
Re: The Latest Tally
All we have to do is to get rid of our own personal debt and be watchful to the government spending because in the end, it will be the citizenry who will suffer.
hampers