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The U.S. just crossed a line that used to signal crisis:

Debt > 100% of GDP.

Not a headline problem.
A mechanism problem.

Start here:

• The government spends $1.33 for every $1 it collects
• Annual deficits are running near 6% of GDP
• Publicly held debt now exceeds the size of the economy

That’s the flow → stock conversion:

Deficits → accumulate → become debt.

But the real shift isn’t the level.

It’s the sensitivity.

As debt rises:

• More of the budget goes to interest
• Higher rates → higher costs → bigger deficits
• Capital gets pulled into government borrowing instead of private investment

Now layer in the constraint:

This isn’t wartime.
This isn’t a temporary shock.

The drivers are structural:

• Entitlements
• Interest costs
• Persistent deficits

And politically:

Both sides continue to prioritize
tax cuts + spending over stabilization.

So the system does what it’s designed to do:

It compounds.

There’s no magic at 100%.

But it marks the point where:

Small changes in rates
→ create large changes in outcomes

And fixing it
→ requires decisions that don’t get votes.

The question isn’t “is 100% dangerous?”

The question is:

What happens to a system
where the math tightens
faster than the politics can respond?

Source: WSJ

Debt to GDP crossed 100% over a decade ago. What is the difference this time?

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