Paying the National Debt and Closing the Budget Gap AARP Bulletin
Paying the National Debt and Closing the Budget Gap - AARP Bulletin
In making the case for public borrowing, he recognized this reality: Governments love to spend. The accumulation of debt, he wrote, is "perhaps the NATURAL DISEASE of all History is clear: The nation's ability to borrow has provided both flexibility and stability while minimizing economic disruption and turmoil ever since. Today, we're at a critical moment. The "natural disease" that Alexander Hamilton foresaw is out of control. The federal government continues to spend $3 for every $2 it collects, and borrows the rest. That amounts to $1.4 trillion in new indebtedness in 2011, bringing the nation's total indebtedness to just shy of the current legal limit of $14.3 trillion. The annual interest on that debt, $206 billion this year, is the fifth-largest and the fastest-growing expense in the That brings us to the Hamilton burden — his insistence that we repay our debts. "The creation of debt should always be accompanied with the means of extinguishment," he wrote in 1790.
Paying Off the Nation' s Debt
Alexander Hamilton burden Debt should be accompanied with means of extinguishment
The next time you hold a $10 bill, look at the portrait and say "thank you" for the blessing and burden of Alexander Hamilton. Before there was a nation, there was a national debt. Alexander Hamilton's wisdom, endorsed by George Washington, was that public debt was not a bad thing — he called it "the price of liberty." More important, he persuaded the Founding Fathers that the United States should pay its debts. See also:Related
In making the case for public borrowing, he recognized this reality: Governments love to spend. The accumulation of debt, he wrote, is "perhaps the NATURAL DISEASE of all History is clear: The nation's ability to borrow has provided both flexibility and stability while minimizing economic disruption and turmoil ever since. Today, we're at a critical moment. The "natural disease" that Alexander Hamilton foresaw is out of control. The federal government continues to spend $3 for every $2 it collects, and borrows the rest. That amounts to $1.4 trillion in new indebtedness in 2011, bringing the nation's total indebtedness to just shy of the current legal limit of $14.3 trillion. The annual interest on that debt, $206 billion this year, is the fifth-largest and the fastest-growing expense in the That brings us to the Hamilton burden — his insistence that we repay our debts. "The creation of debt should always be accompanied with the means of extinguishment," he wrote in 1790.
The federal government increases its debt about $20,000 every 3/10 second.