Planet Money - How much national debt is too much?
Episode Date: June 7, 2024Most economic textbooks will tell you that there can be real dangers in running up a big national debt. A major concern is how the debt you add now could slow down economic growth in the future. Econo...mists have not been able to nail down how much debt a country can safely take on. But they have tried.Back in 2010, two economists took a look at 20 countries over the course of decades, and sometimes centuries, and came back with a number. Their analysis suggested that economic growth slowed significantly once national debt passed 90% of annual GDP... and that is when the fight over debt and growth really took off.On today's episode: a deep dive on what we know, and what we don't know, about when exactly national debt becomes a problem. We will also try to figure out how worried we should be about the United States' current debt total of 26 trillion dollars.This episode was hosted by Keith Romer and Nick Fountain. It was produced by Willa Rubin and edited by Molly Messick. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez with help from Sofia Shchukina and engineered by Cena Loffredo. Alex Goldmark is Planet Money's executive producer.Help support Planet Money and hear our bonus episodes by subscribing to Planet Money+ in Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org/planetmoney.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Rachel Martin. After hosting Morning Edition for years, I know that the news can
wear you down. So we made a new podcast called Wild Card, where a special deck of cards and
a whole bunch of fascinating guests help us sort out what makes life meaningful. It's
part game show, part existential deep dive, and it is seriously fun. Join me on Wild Card
wherever you get your podcasts, only from NPR.
This is Planet Money from NPR.
Okay.
We are going to start today's show by jumping into the old Planet Money time machine.
Economic Destination 2009, a time when the government was spending lots and
lots of money and the national debt was shooting up yeah back then the US was
trying to pull itself out of the recession that followed the financial
crisis and one of the big strategies the government used was just to spend and
spend and spend we bail out some banks we lowered taxes there was all this
money for infrastructure.
Early in the recession, I think a lot of people were very supportive of the big steps the
government took to increase government spending and reduce taxes.
That is Karen Dynan.
She teaches at Harvard now.
Earlier in her career, she worked at the Federal Reserve, did a stint as the chief economist
at the Treasury Department.
And Karen says it didn't take long for some people to question the wisdom of all that
spending.
Attitudes changed.
And, you know, there were some economists and some policymakers, I think particularly
people we would call deficit hawks, who started to get quite concerned.
Karen, she was firmly in the deficit dove camp back then.
To her, it seemed obvious that the economy was not going to get back on its feet
without an ongoing infusion of government spending.
But she at least understood the thing the hawks were afraid of.
Sure, in pure dollar terms at least,
the country had never taken on so much debt so fast. In 2008, the gross
public national debt was around $6 trillion. Then it was $7 trillion. Then $9 trillion. By 2012,
it was $11 trillion. And as most econ textbooks will tell you, there can be real dangers in
running up a big national debt. One of the classic worries is how much the debt you take on
now could cost you in the future.
So the scary thing about high debt is that you can get
a snowballing of debt because of interest costs.
And when you're paying a lot of interest,
and then you're running a larger deficit
because you're paying a lot of interest,
that adds to the debt, and then you get to the next period and you have more debt and then you have more interests.
And so it just keeps compounding and getting worse and worse and worse.
After the financial crisis, interest rates were low, but that didn't necessarily mean
they would always be low.
The markets could look at these higher and higher levels of debt and decide, you know
what, maybe Treasury bonds, the IOUs, the US government has to sell to spend more than it takes in.
Maybe those bonds aren't such a great investment anymore.
Debt becomes costly for us when investors, the people that buy our debt, lose their appetite
to hold our debt.
Right, because to keep investors buying that debt anyways, the government would then have
to pay higher and higher interest rates on those IOUs, which would make the whole thing
snowball even faster.
Now, neither of those bad, scary outcomes came to pass.
In hindsight, it actually seems pretty clear that the people saying the government was
right to spend all that money, that they ended up on the right side of history.
If anything, a lot of economists of economists including Karen actually think that the
government should have spent even more than it did, that it could have shortened
the Great Recession. But that's hindsight. Yeah. Karen says it could be really
tricky for policymakers to make these huge decisions in real time without
knowing for sure what's gonna happen as a result. You can't just look in the
textbook to get the answer to your policy challenge that you're
facing.
You don't have evidence to go off of, and it leads to this murkiness.
Which leads us to now, to 2024.
Because once again, we have lived through a massive crisis, this time the pandemic,
and once again, the government responded to that crisis
by just pumping incomprehensible amounts of money
into the economy and running up a huge tab.
In 2019, the gross public national debt
was around $17 trillion.
Today, it's over $26 trillion.
And where after the financial crisis,
Karen looked at the situation and said,
you know what, it's worth the risk.
We got to keep spending.
This time she is not so sure because she thinks at some point we could get to a place where
there is too much debt and it does start to hurt the economy.
But it's not clear to her where that line is.
The uncertainty, the lack of evidence, the murkiness, that's feeling pretty real for
her these days. I mean, so the image that comes to mind is that the policymaker, I imagine sort of inching
out on the ice and then if it cracks, that's when you stop and you hope you don't fall
through.
I think that's right.
I mean, I think that's the...
The ice cracking, that's when you're in real trouble.
But when exactly that ice might crack, when the debt will start to hurt the economy?
We can't really say.
It seems like we don't have a good way of knowing whether we're 5% away from the ice
cracking or 50% away from the ice cracking.
Yeah, that's a problem.
That is a real problem.
Hello and welcome to Planet Money.
I'm Keith Romer.
And I'm Nick Fountain.
The idea that a lot of national debt is bad for the economy has been around for a long
time.
But nailing down when exactly the bad thing is supposed to happen, economists have not
been able to do that.
So today on the show, a deep dive on what we know
and what we don't know about when a lot of debt
turns into too much debt.
Economists have been thinking about this
and fighting about it for a long time now.
We're gonna take a look at some of that thinking
and some of that fighting,
and we are gonna try to figure out just how big a problem
our $26 trillion worth of national debt really
is.
This message comes from NPR sponsor, LinkedIn Marketing Solutions.
As a business to business marketer, your needs are unique.
B2B buying cycles are long,
and your customers face incredibly complex decisions.
LinkedIn ads empowers marketers
by allowing you to build the right relationships,
drive results, and reach your customers
in a respectful environment.
Make B2B marketing everything it can be
and get a $100 credit on your next campaign.
Go to linkedin.com slash money to claim your credit.
Terms and conditions apply.
Support for this podcast and the following message come from Wise, the app that makes
managing your money in different currencies easy. With Wise, you can send and spend money
internationally at the mid-market exchange rate. No guesswork and no hidden fees. Learn
more about how Wise could work for you at fees. Learn more about how WISE could work for you at WISE.com.
When economists talk about the trouble that a country can get itself in by running up too much
debt, there are a few bad scenarios they worry about. One of them is that the country can end
up so underwater that it ends up defaulting on its debt, stiffing its creditors, which tends to not
go great. Sure. Or in order to escape its debt, maybe a country has to let inflation run wild and
make its money worthless. Also not great. But things can also get bad without getting
quite so dramatic. Sometimes having a lot of debt can just drag down the economy, chop
growth off at the knees. And this last concern was really what the fight was over in the
U.S. in the aftermath of the financial crisis. Was all this money the country was spending ultimately
going to end up causing more problems than it solved? That relationship between national debt
and slow growth also just so happened to be the subject of this famous paper that came out in 2010
right as U.S. debt was really taking off. The paper's authors
were these two prominent economists, Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff. They had dug up all
this data about debt for 20 advanced economies across decades, and according to the paper,
history had a thing or two to teach us about what levels of debt were okay and which levels maybe
weren't okay. The paper was short. It was just six pages. It was called growth in a time of debt. And
it kind of took the world by storm. In a lot of ways, it defined the terms of the argument
for the next several years. In fact, this little paper had such a big impact that we
are going to spend most of the rest of the show talking about it, the ideas it inspired
and also the fights.
Karen Dynan, the Harvard professor from before,
says the paper was such a big deal,
in part because it seemed to offer an answer
to that giant question on everyone's mind back then.
At what point will the debt start
to limit economic growth?
The statistic that caught so much attention
was that they had a result that suggested
that when a country has debt that is equivalent to 90% of their GDP,
that their growth rate would be half of what it would be in times when debt was at a more normal level.
So just for a little context, in the early 2000s, the debt to GDP ratio in the US was around 35%
meaning the national debt was equivalent to
35% of the value of every good or service the country made for an entire year
By 2010 when the paper came out the debt to GDP ratio had gone all the way up to 60%
so not anywhere near that 90% line, but getting closer. And sometimes when Reinhart and Rogoff would write about their findings, they would use
a national debt figure that included treasury bonds the government held itself, which made
the US debt to GDP ratio look like it had already crossed 90%.
And so you can kind of see why so many politicians and people in the media latched on to that
paper.
You know, here was this speed limit for debt that said, if your debt goes past 90% of GDP,
then the wheels are going to fall off of your economy.
Even though we should say that is not exactly what the paper said.
The claim was more, hey, here's this interesting pattern in the data that suggests that high debt is, generally speaking, worse for economic growth
than having lower levels of debt. But Karen says that 90% number, it got some real traction.
You know, it wasn't your average economist who was running around like things were on
fire. It was more that the people who didn't like all this fiscal
stimulus were starting to use it as a reason why the government needed to tighten its belt.
If you were a debt hawk, you had a good argument for your position.
Yeah, exactly.
Now, up to this point, we've been talking about this grand debt experiment as if the
US were the only country that was running up this huge bill. But of course, lots of
countries were trying to spend their way out of the Great Recession.
Debt to GDP ratios were ballooning pretty much everywhere.
And so around the world, people were looking at that 90% red line and wondering,
um, does that apply to us too? Back then, international monetary fund economist Andrea
Prez Bitero was just getting started in macroeconomics. At the time, I was an assistant professor at the university in Italy.
Which university?
University of Ancona, which is a small place in the east coast of Italy by the sea.
As much as the paper itself, Andrea remembers the fights about it, playing out in blogs
and newspapers.
I think when that paper came out, it was a big deal, meaning it was clearly an important
paper on a very important topic, very sensitive topic at the time. Yeah, these were live arguments.
There were impassioned calls for austerity measures and belt tightening and equally impassioned
arguments for the other side saying no don't mess up this recovery now is not the time to stop sending.
The paper even generated a kind of mini scandal at one point. These, shall we say, more debt-friendly
economists put out a paper highlighting a pretty big mistake in the Excel spreadsheet
that Reinhart and Rogoff had used. The last sentence of that paper reads, the fact that
Reinhart and Rogoff's findings are wrong should therefore lead us to reassess the austerity
agenda itself in both Europe and the United States. So that was also added sort of to the debate.
It was not just a debate and the one who were saying oh yes this is a good
argument to push for fiscal consolidation, others saying maybe
no. There was also a discussion about yes this is basically evidence which is
flawed and
based on some mistakes.
And so that make, I guess, the debate even more sort of strong between people.
Correcting the mistake in the paper weakened the effect that high debt seemed to have on
growth, but it didn't make it go away.
And Andrea says a lot of economists were still intrigued enough to want to keep poking and
prodding at that seductive idea of the magic debt threshold.
I think that the true contribution of this paper
by Rana Rogoff was to open up a very large body of research
that started from their funding and try to dig deeper
and try to expand our understanding of how debt could affect
the economy.
Because there were some really fundamental questions that that Reinhart and Rogoff paper
had left unanswered.
Yeah, like here is one very, very important question.
Just because there's this correlation between high levels of debt and lower growth, does
that necessarily mean that high debt is causing the economy to slow down?
And I guess that correlation is not causation is sentenced that in planet Banner has been
repeated like zillions of time already. Basically, it's our motto. Yeah, yeah, we have it in
Latin written over the door. Exactly. So clearly also in this case, correlation doesn't mean
causation. Now, there are good theoretical reasons for why you might think that too much debt could
slow down the economy.
We've talked about a couple of them already, that snowball effect of all that debt compounding,
the way investors can demand higher returns on government bonds.
There's also this phenomenon that economists call crowding out, which works like this.
To take on debt, the government has to sell treasury bonds, basically IOUs, and if investors keep buying and buying and buying those treasury bonds,
that means that money isn't going into private investment, you know, building factories or
researching the next generation of microchips. And so growth, the idea goes, is going to
suffer.
But Andrea says that causation here could also run in the opposite direction.
Low growth could be causing high debt. You can really think a situation in which your
economy is underperforming and you as a policymaker you want to stimulate the economy, therefore
you want to do public consumption, public investment. And one way to do that is borrowing
money. If you borrow money, you're going to increase your debt.
So what you're going to observe in the data, you have low growth and high debt.
And exactly because of this example, clearly we cannot conclude that higher debt is causing
lower growth, if anything is the other way around.
The causality question is one that Andrea worked on himself.
In the end, he and his co-author concluded what pretty much everyone ended up concluding.
Based on the empirical evidence at least, you can't definitively answer this one.
Andrea thinks that depending on the situation, the causation can run in either direction.
Sometimes high debt causes low growth, sometimes low growth causes high debt.
Andrea and all these different economists around the world,
also looked into other questions,
other ways of looking at the historical data
that could help identify when exactly debt
might become dangerous.
It's a sort of tipping point, if you want,
is gonna be potentially very different across countries.
So it could be 90% for some economies,
it could be 45% for other economies, it could be 45% for other
economies, it could be 100% for some other economies. Also the debt a country
has? That can come in all of these different flavors. There are many
dimension in which debt is going to be different. One for instance is the
currency composition. One country can borrow in domestic currency and another
country could have to borrow much
more in foreign currency.
So sort of the Argentina problem.
Yes.
Let's think of the emerging market like Argentina or any other country who borrows in dollars.
When the currency depreciate, then the value, the dollar value of your debt, it become higher.
So you need much more money to pay back the debt.
Also it seemed to matter who held the government's debt.
Was it banks?
Was it investors from inside the country?
From outside the country?
Was it short-term debt?
Long-term debt?
Yeah, how much debt a country can safely take on turns out to depend on all these different
factors.
This is one where the simple seeming result, you know, countries that have debt to GDP
ratios over 90% see lower economic growth, where that result just got more and more and more complicated the longer people poked at it.
Which Andrea sees as a good outcome.
Economists, they know more now than they did when all of this started.
Even if you don't get to perfection, even if you do something to the extent that you
are aware of limitation of your analysis, I think you
still provide a very valuable contribution.
But here's the thing.
After several years of this kind of scholarship, the attention of macroeconomics kind of drifted
away from the topic.
In part, this is because of how fractured the problem had become, how many tiny pieces
that one big, clean-seeming idea had turned out to
have been made of. But it was also because the real world itself suddenly
seemed to be saying, maybe this isn't such a big important problem after all.
Because the thing that makes high levels of debt destructive to an economy is not
really the debt itself, it's the interest a country has to pay on that debt. And in
the wake of the financial crisis, all around the world, interest rates went down to basically
zero and just kind of stayed there for years.
And so for a while, a lot of macroeconomists were like, maybe we don't really need to
worry all that much about debt after all. And then the world changed. Again. In two ways. First, the pandemic and
all the spending that followed pushed debt way higher. And second, and more importantly in this
case, interest rates went back up. And so having a lot of debt today is going to cost the U.S.
and countries all over the world a lot more than it would have five or six years ago.
a lot more than it would have five or six years ago.
Yeah, that question that economists put down for a bit, how much debt we can get away with,
it is starting to look pretty relevant again.
After the break, how dangerous is our $26 trillion
of national debt?
We put that question to the OG of debt to GDP ratio-ese.
It's Kenneth Rogoff. We're talking to Kenneth Rogoff.
Yes.
On this week's episode of Wild Card, comedian Bowen Yang says you don't have to feel bad for falling short on mindfulness.
I get in my own way by like over privileging the present.
That's so interesting because everyone wants to be in the present.
I feel like being present is overrated.
I'm Rachel Martin.
Join us for NPR's Wild Card podcast, the game where cards control the conversation.
When you hear Birmingham, Alabama, you might think about the civil rights movement, but maybe not about baseball. podcast, the game where cards control the conversation. this whole story. Listen to Road to Rickwood from WWNO and WRKF, part of the NPR Network.
The economy right now is bewildering, impenetrable, inconceivable.
Not when you have the indicator of our guys in your ears. In under 10 minutes every day, we simplify the complicated news like...
How does inflation drop? What the heck is a SPAC? Why are trendy little high-fiber sodas
suddenly dominating store shelves and more? Listen to the indicator from Planet Money and NPR.
This message comes from Tinkercast. For curious kids and grownups, Wow in the World is an adventure
filled cartoon for the ear podcast all about amazing innovations in science and technology.
Listen to Wow in the World wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, it's Weyland Wong.
Every couple of weeks, we make a pitch about Planet Money Plus.
Sponsor-free listening, bonus episodes, supporting the work of Planet Money.
These are all great perks, but you know what's really great?
New merch.
T-shirts, tote bags, mugs, hats, even plushies.
We've got them and they've all got the Indicators new branding.
And only Planet Money Plus supporters can find out how to buy them.
It's in our latest bonus episode where we also revealed the winning name of the Indicator mascot.
So if you're signed up already, get that merch.
If you haven't, now's your chance. Just go to plus.mpr.org slash Planet Money.
So I will start you off with the easiest question, which is,
can you identify yourself?
Yeah, my name is Kenneth Rogoff.
I'm a professor of economics at Harvard University.
And I realize you've reminded me of one of my other questions,
which is Kenneth or Ken.
Oh, Ken is great.
Okay, so we'll go Ken.
I mean, but when I'm giving my formal name, Kenneth.
Formally Kenneth, informally Ken.
Yeah.
If you ask Ken Rogoff about that paper he wrote with Carmen Reinhardt, it is clear that
14 years on, he is still kind of annoyed about the way it all blew up.
Back then, Reinhardt and Rogoff were writing op-eds
warning governments of the risks of debt levels above 90%.
But today, he insists, he never meant for people
to take their groupings of countries
into low debt, medium debt, high debt,
and very high debt to GDP countries
to mean that there was some bright red deadline
you couldn't cross.
One of our buckets was, it was our highest bucket, was 90%.
But we didn't say that suddenly you go to the devil
when you get to 91%.
That's a little bit like saying,
if you're driving in a car in a 55 mile an hour speed limit
and you go to 56, you're going to crash the next minute.
And that interpretation, which was polemically used in addition to a lot of polemic misrepresentation,
I think said, oh, it's so crazy.
How can they say that?
And of course, we didn't.
And he says, yes, obviously, there are a lot of factors that contribute to when national
debt becomes a problem for a country.
And of course, different countries are going to be able to tolerate more or less debt.
But I do wanna qualify that a little bit
by saying to say, therefore there's no threshold,
therefore any level of debt is fine.
That's kind of nuts also.
Yeah, his basic intuition remains unchanged.
He says a country is playing with fire
if it just loads on more and more and more debt.
Eventually all of that debt is going to slow down the country's ability to grow.
And he thinks the US is headed in that direction right now.
I think if you look at where the United States is today, we're probably on a trajectory that
needs to get adjusted.
And it's not just our debt, it's our social security,
our medical care, everything.
But Ken says politicians on both sides of the aisle
have gotten really resistant to either raising taxes
or cutting spending enough to balance the budget.
Ever since the pandemic started,
the US has been running enormous budget deficits.
In 2020, it was over 14% of GDP,
but even last year it was 6%.% of GDP. But even last year, it was
6%.
The tendencies when the other party's in power, debt's a terrible problem. And when
you're in power, it's not.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, the debt to GDP ratio in the US is on track
to pass 115% in 2033 and get to 180% sometime in the next 30 years.
When Ken looks at all this, it's not like he thinks we are headed towards some economic
Armageddon.
You know, barring something really horrible happening, I don't foresee a massive problem.
But Ken says there are signs of trouble in the economy. We've
seen inflation spike, investors demanding higher rates on US Treasuries. To him
those happen partly as a result of all the debt we've taken on. And he thinks
spikes in inflation and interest rates might keep happening. What I think is
likely to happen over the next 10 years is we'll probably have
another episode of that. So maybe until we've got punched in the face a couple more times,
we may not adjust. And adjusting, finding a way to stop running such a high deficit year after year,
that would involve some genuinely hard trade-offs, some mixture of cutting into how much we spend
on programs that Americans really value, or raising taxes pretty significantly.
Now, Ken, he has been on the more debt hawkish side of things for a long time now,
but even some of those economists who used to feel okay about how high the debt was getting,
they are starting to see things differently.
Like Karen Dynan, the other Harvard professor
we talked to at the start of the show.
After the Great Recession, she thought all the spending
we were doing was worth the risk.
This time around, she's not so sure.
Policymakers need to be honest about, you know,
what's on the horizon in terms of national
debt and the fact that we are on an unsustainable path.
My sense is that you did not used to worry about the size of the national debt to the
extent that you do today.
And I wondered, is it,
are you maybe a born again debt hawk?
Karen was not willing to go on the record as team hawk,
but it was actually this stray hawkish comment
I heard her make at a conference earlier this year that
inspired this whole episode.
She had been talking about all the stuff we've been talking about in the show,
how big the debt is, how higher deficits have been.
And she said something to the effect of,
you know what, I know there's no magic red line for debt,
but maybe we'd all be better off if there was one.
Having a benchmark like that is useful
because it can force action.
And even though I don't think there is a magic level, I do feel like if there was some level
we knew about, it could then kind of be constructive politically and get people to face up to the
hard decisions they're going to need to make.
You kind of wish there was one.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
So you don't want me to ask you at what percentage of GDP the national debt will cause a crisis?
No.
I mean, I can't tell you that number.
Is it 125% of GDP?
You're still asking me.
Higher or lower?
Sorry, I'm not answering that question.
Coming up next time on Planet Money, President Biden recently announced tariffs that he says
would help create a China-free battery supply chain.
And a key part of that supply chain?
Graphite.
Is it kind of like the underdog critical mineral?
I think, well, I mean, I'm biased, but it is.
It has not been given its fair shake.
But announcing tariffs is one thing.
Actually moving a supply chain in the real physical world?
That is tricky.
That's coming up next on Planet Money. Today's show was produced by Willow Rubin and edited
by Molly Messick. It was engineered by Sina LaFredo. Fact checking by Sierra Juarez with
help from Sofia Shukuna. Alex Goldmark is our executive producer. One final note, the
economist Andrea Presbidero we talked to for today's show.
He works at the International Monetary Fund, but the views he expressed are his and not the IMF's,
its executive board or its management.
I'm Nick Fountain and I'm Keith Romer. This is NPR. Thanks for listening.
You care about what's happening in the world.
Let State of the World from NPR keep you informed.
Each day we transport you to a different point on the globe and introduce you to the people
living world events.
We don't just tell you world news, we take you there.
And you can make this journey while you're doing the dishes or driving your car.
State of the World podcast from NPR, vital international stories every day.
With more and more information coming at you all day every day, it can be hard to know
where to focus.
The new Consider This Newsletter from NPR can be that focus. Every weekday
afternoon, we take one of the day's biggest stories and break it down in a simple skimmable
format so you can get a better grasp of one important topic and what it means for you
in a couple of minutes. Sign up for free at npr.org slash consider this newsletter.
The Bullseye podcast is, according to one journalist, the, quote, kind of show people this newsletter.