In 1980, America's publicly held debt reached more than $712 billion (about $2.8 trillion in 2025 dollars), or roughly 25 percent of annual U.S. gross domestic product (GDP). Today, that figure is a little over $30 trillion, or around 100 percent of GDP. And as the federal debt grew 42 times larger over that span, the economy grew only tenfold. You can't expand the numerator four times faster than the denominator for 45 years without courting economic danger.
That's where we find ourselves. The U.S. is at peace, and despite President Donald Trump's claims, there's no national emergency. And yet we've only seen debt as a higher share of GDP during the years of 1945, 1946, 2020, and 2021. Then, Republicans and Democrats knew to scale back. Now, debt explodes during emergencies and continues

 Reason Magazine
 Reason Magazine

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