We got away with increasing the national debt exponentially in a very short time because of a low-interest rate environment. But are you willing to bet that interest rates will always be rock-bottom? If you’re a young American, welcome to your inheritance.

According to the United States Treasury, the total national debt is $18.2 trillion. The annual, average interest rate on the debt as of July of 2015 is 2.3%, down from 2.4% in July of 2014. Here’s why that’s a problem.

Low interest rates mean low carrying costs for debt. If the interest rate is 10%, you’re monthly payment on a $250,000 house is going to be substantially more than if the interest rate is only 4%. The same principle applies to the national debt. We’ve been able to increase the amount of debt, just like people can buy a more expensive house, but keep the annual debt costs low with low interest rates.

Here’s a chart provided by the United States Treasury that shows the annual national debt payments going back fifteen years. As you can see, the annual amount paid has fluctuated between $454 billion and $318 billion.

interest_payments_on_debt

While those numbers represent a big swing percentage-wise, it’s not that big considering how much the national debt has risen since 2000. Take a look:

national_debt_2000_to_2015

At the beginning of 2000, the national debt was less than $6 trillion. It is now over $18 trillion. That’s a three-fold increase in fifteen years! Recall that the payment on the national debt has not seen a three-fold increase. The average annual payment on the debt between 2000 and 2015 was $386 billion. If that payment had tripled, we’d be in trouble.

Why? Because of the realities of tax revenues and the federal budget.

In 2015, the White House’s budget expects $3.18 trillion in tax revenue while spending $3.8 trillion. If those projections are proven true, then the country will add $583 billion to the national debt in fiscal year 2015. Here’s the chart:

2015_budget

When you dig through the rest of the budget, you will find that only $229 billion is budget for payments on the national debt. That’s a lot less than the $351 billion in interest payments that the Treasury expects to accrue in fiscal year 2015.

Setting aside the discrepancy, let’s just run with the budgeted numbers. As a portion of total federal spending, including mandatory spending such as Social Security and Medicare, payments on the national debt at a 2.3% interest rate are currently 6% of all spending. Here’s the chart from National Priorities:

federal_spending_pie_chart

To put things in perspective, the biggest chunks of the pie are as follows: Social Security is 33%, Medicare is 27%, military spending represents 16%, and debt payments represent 6%. That leaves 18% of the federal budget for everything else that the government does including courts, transportation, environment, energy, agriculture, etc. Don’t forget that to achieve those spending levels in 2015, the U.S. is required to borrow over $500 billion. And, again, more than $350 billion will be owed in interest alone on the national debt in 2015.

Here’s the big problem to keep in mind: the interest rate on the $18 trillion and rising national debt. As it is, 6% of all federal spending goes to service the debt. What if that number jumps higher?

Despite the fact that the national debt has tripled since 2000, the amount paid to service the debt hasn’t changed that much over the last decade and a half because the interest rate has been held so low. But now we are potentially heading into an era of rising interest rates. Keep in mind that we are at forty-year lows for the interest rates on the national debt. See the chart below from the Congressional Budget Office:

cbo_interest_rates.jpeg

An interest rate of 4%, 6%, or even 8% isn’t that hard to imagine down the road when you consider the recent past. It’s especially realistic when you consider that the interest on that national debt got to 14% in the 1980s!

What would happen to our budget if the interest rate rose to historical levels given our current revenue and budget?

  • At the current 2.3% interest rate on $18.2 trillion in national debt, we have accrued $351 billion in interest, but we’re only budgeted to pay $229 billion, which is 6% of total spending and 7.2% of actual tax revenue.
  • At a 4% interest rate on $18.2 trillion in national debt, the amount accrued in interest annually would be $728 billion, which is 19% of total spending and 23% of actual tax revenue.
  • At a 6% interest rate on $18.2 trillion in national debt, the amount accrued in interest annually would be $1.09 trillion, which is 29% of total spending and 34% of actual tax revenue.
  • At an 8% interest rate on $18.2 trillion in national debt, the amount accrued in interest annually would be $1.456 trillion, which is 39% of total spending and 46% of actual tax revenue.
  • At a 10% interest rate on $18.2 trillion in national debt, the amount accrued in interest annually would be $1.820 trillion, which is 48% of total spending and 57% of actual tax revenue.

One could keep going higher with the interest rates, but there is no sense in it. At an 8% interest rate, if mandatory spending levels on Social Security and Medicare are left unchanged (currently 60% of total federal spending), then there is no military, no federal courts, no EPA, no spending on roads, nothing. There simply is no money to spend on those items if we’re to keep paying our debt obligations.

We got away with increasing the national debt exponentially in a very short time because of a low-interest rate environment. But are you willing to bet that interest rates will always be rock-bottom?

If you’re a young American, welcome to your inheritance.

Sources: United States TreasuryAverage Interest Rate

Republished with gracious permission from Intellectual Takeout (September 2015).

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The featured image is a photograph of a 1979 $10,000 Treasury Bond, and is in the public domain, courtesy of  Wikimedia Commons.

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