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America borrowed $43.5 billion a week in the first four months of the fiscal year
Posted on 2/10/26 at 2:53 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 2:53 pm
quote:
The first four months of fiscal year 2026 got off to an expensive start for the U.S., according to the latest estimates from the Congressional Budget Office (CBO).
The CBO released a report yesterday detailing that, for the first third of FY26 (which began in October), the U.S. government operated at a deficit, and so borrowed $696 billion. That included $94 billion in January alone, and works out to an average of $43.5 billion for each of the 16 weeks of the four months since.
While America’s government spending outweighs its revenue generation, its finances are also negatively compounded by the interest payments needed to maintain its debt. Total national debt now sits at more than $38.5 trillion. U.S. GDP is about $31 trillion, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.
LINK
Posted on 2/10/26 at 2:59 pm to ragincajun03
"The United States is the best at borrowing money. We do it better than any other country ever did it"
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:01 pm to ragincajun03
Zero of the $43 billion was borrowed by OT ballers , who all have no debt and buy their homes and vehicles outright with cash.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:02 pm to ragincajun03
Our kids are so fricked.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:06 pm to ragincajun03
Was this before or after we tried dickswinging our way into buying Greenland
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 3:06 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:07 pm to GeorgeTheGreek
quote:
Our kids are so fricked.
Where in the world would that not be the case?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:23 pm to jmcwhrter
quote:
Where in the world would that not be the case?
El Salvador and 30A
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:29 pm to ragincajun03
Good thing Congress refused to enact DOGE cuts, and certain stupid arse Senators like Chuck Schumer vowed to put all of them back in the budget that did get cut.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:43 pm to ragincajun03
Serious question. From Where?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:48 pm to LCboi
It’s astonishing to me the people I know that make good money relatively speaking, and are swimming in debt.
The kids events, cars, vacations, partying etc.
Idk how people sleep at night with $100 to their name.
Why don’t people look to the idea that being debt free trumps all the material things that you can’t afford?
The kids events, cars, vacations, partying etc.
Idk how people sleep at night with $100 to their name.
Why don’t people look to the idea that being debt free trumps all the material things that you can’t afford?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:49 pm to ragincajun03
I hate that we don't require fiscal responsibility from our elected officials. At any level.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 3:58 pm to LCboi
I hate quoting AI, but:
The Federal Reserve purchases U.S. government debt (Treasury securities) using "newly created" digital funds, not physical cash or taxpayer money. The Fed credits the reserve accounts of commercial banks or primary dealers from whom they buy the securities, essentially increasing the electronic balance in the banking system.
Key details regarding this process:
Creation of Reserves: When the Fed buys bonds, it credits the seller's account with reserves (deposits at the Fed), which increases the money supply.
Open Market Operations: These purchases are made in the secondary market (not directly from the Treasury) to influence interest rates and provide liquidity.
"Quantitative Easing": During economic downturns, this process—often referred to as Quantitative Easing—is used to inject money into the economy.
Asset Growth: The Fed has historically used this method to accumulate trillions in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities on its balance sheet.
In essence, the Fed pays for government debt by expanding its own balance sheet, effectively creating money.
The Federal Reserve purchases U.S. government debt (Treasury securities) using "newly created" digital funds, not physical cash or taxpayer money. The Fed credits the reserve accounts of commercial banks or primary dealers from whom they buy the securities, essentially increasing the electronic balance in the banking system.
Key details regarding this process:
Creation of Reserves: When the Fed buys bonds, it credits the seller's account with reserves (deposits at the Fed), which increases the money supply.
Open Market Operations: These purchases are made in the secondary market (not directly from the Treasury) to influence interest rates and provide liquidity.
"Quantitative Easing": During economic downturns, this process—often referred to as Quantitative Easing—is used to inject money into the economy.
Asset Growth: The Fed has historically used this method to accumulate trillions in Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities on its balance sheet.
In essence, the Fed pays for government debt by expanding its own balance sheet, effectively creating money.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:09 pm to GeorgeTheGreek
quote:
Our kids are so fricked.
Nothing will change until the big 3 are destroyed.
Medicare Medicaid and social security gotta go.
Downvotes are why we add 100,000 to our debt faster than you read this sentence.
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 5:40 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:16 pm to ragincajun03
FY 26 to date spending, from the treasury site (i.e. October 2025 to date--so roughly 1/4 of a year (data likely collected through Dec.)):
$402 B Social Security
$270 B Net Interest
$267 B National Defense
$261 B Health
$254 B Medicare
$166 B Income Security
$114 B Veterans Benefits and Services
$39 B Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services
$33 B Transportation
$23 B Administration of Justice
-$2 B Other
That's total about 1.83T spent in 3 months; and we have about 1.22T in revenue for the same period. That means deficit this year of 1.8 to 2.4T, if we continue that pace.
Max DOGE cuts were projected at less than $100B, even if brutally thorough. (I know Musk said 2T before election, but that's more than we spend total and was just grandstanding. April 2025 max estimate was $150B and late 2025 was projected at $63B.) IMO, no matter how much you cut, it's not enough--not to say we shouldn't be careful and cut spending, too. We'd have to completely get rid of Social Security and Health assistance to get near breakeven, which some folks are okay with....
We likely don't take in enough revenue b/c low tax, which is fine, but it costs us long term. Further concerning with a shrinking population.
Tariffs only fill the gap so much and at some point are counter productive. We imported roughly 325B in goods last year. Even if we tariffed 100% (which would cause the imports and likely our GDP to drop, so at some rate, counterproductive), that's only 1/6 of the current deficit.
The debt isn't unsustainable yet as GDP grows, but we're projecting that way in the near term.
Hence the theories that DJT is crippling the dollar to make borrowing cheaper and/or, as Putin accused us, of dumping some debt into crypto and then killing whichever coin they use for the debt. IDK how there would be enough buyers though.
In short, agree with whoever said our kids are screwed.
$402 B Social Security
$270 B Net Interest
$267 B National Defense
$261 B Health
$254 B Medicare
$166 B Income Security
$114 B Veterans Benefits and Services
$39 B Education, Training, Employment, and Social Services
$33 B Transportation
$23 B Administration of Justice
-$2 B Other
That's total about 1.83T spent in 3 months; and we have about 1.22T in revenue for the same period. That means deficit this year of 1.8 to 2.4T, if we continue that pace.
Max DOGE cuts were projected at less than $100B, even if brutally thorough. (I know Musk said 2T before election, but that's more than we spend total and was just grandstanding. April 2025 max estimate was $150B and late 2025 was projected at $63B.) IMO, no matter how much you cut, it's not enough--not to say we shouldn't be careful and cut spending, too. We'd have to completely get rid of Social Security and Health assistance to get near breakeven, which some folks are okay with....
We likely don't take in enough revenue b/c low tax, which is fine, but it costs us long term. Further concerning with a shrinking population.
Tariffs only fill the gap so much and at some point are counter productive. We imported roughly 325B in goods last year. Even if we tariffed 100% (which would cause the imports and likely our GDP to drop, so at some rate, counterproductive), that's only 1/6 of the current deficit.
The debt isn't unsustainable yet as GDP grows, but we're projecting that way in the near term.
Hence the theories that DJT is crippling the dollar to make borrowing cheaper and/or, as Putin accused us, of dumping some debt into crypto and then killing whichever coin they use for the debt. IDK how there would be enough buyers though.
In short, agree with whoever said our kids are screwed.
This post was edited on 2/10/26 at 4:20 pm
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:17 pm to ragincajun03
How much went to Minneapolis learing centers and the brother friker?
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:25 pm to Gotabyte
California, Minnesota and Washington say investigating fraud is racist.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:27 pm to ragincajun03
quote:
America borrowed $43.5 billion a week in the first four months of the fiscal year
It's a real problem, and unfortunately Trump is the only person in Washington who wants to fix it.
Posted on 2/10/26 at 4:35 pm to beerJeep
quote:
Medicare Medicaid and social security gotta go.
I’d say those three come AFTER the big number one and that’s fraud which is a minimum of 25% if the debt
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