Even the size of the debt would be ok as long as gdp is growing faster than the debt. It’s not, which means the deficit spending is being used on things that are not growing gdp faster than interest rates on that debt.
Like any business, government debt is fine as long as it’s used to fund expenses that have an roi greater than the debt servicing costs. Otherwise there will be a default (tho for government inflation is also an option)
Yes due to soft default (inflation). If you look at projected debt burdens, they are predicted to grow faster than gdp if inflation targets are met. If inflation targets aren’t met, like they haven’t in the past few years, then it’s effectively a default since the government is paying back less in inflation adjusted dollars than it borrowed. Plenty of other countries have tried this strategy and it doesn’t merit a high credit rating.
> government debt is fine as long as it’s used to fund expenses that have an roi greater than the debt servicing costs
Most federal spending is on things that will have no monetary return. A very large proportion is on age-related spending (healthcare and social security).
Running up debt to pay for education makes a certain amount of sense. Running up debt to pay for the lifestyles of those who will never have to service that debt seems unjust.
In theory healthcare and social security could provide positive roi. For healthcare due to a healthier workforce being more productive, and for social security by removing family burdens and freeing up prime age workers from elder care.
Like any business, government debt is fine as long as it’s used to fund expenses that have an roi greater than the debt servicing costs. Otherwise there will be a default (tho for government inflation is also an option)