The federal government ran another big deficit in June, as the national debt inches closer to $35 trillion.
$35 trillion USD.
Trillion with a 'T.'
That's an unfathomable number. It's meaningless to most people. We simply can't comprehend a number that big.
Let's try to put the $34.9 trillion national debt into perspective.
According to the National Debt Clock, every American citizen would have to write a check for $103,565 to pay off the national debt.
Of course, a lot of people don't pay taxes. That means the taxpayer burden is much higher. Every U.S. taxpayer would have to write a check for $266,953 to wipe out the debt. And that's on top of the taxes we already pay!
To put it another way, $35 trillion is more than the total economies of China, Japan, Germany, and the UK combined.
It's hard to wrap your head around how big 1 trillion is, much less 35 trillion. Here are a few factoids to help you visualize just how big that number is:
- There are 1 million seconds in 11.5 days. A trillion seconds is about 32,000 years.
- If you could say one number every second, it would take about 11.5 million days to count to 1 trillion.
- If you had spent $1 million every day since the birth of Christ, you still wouldn't have spent $1 trillion.
- If you line up dollar bills end-to-end, you could go to the moon and back around 203 times with $1 trillion. You could wrap them around the earth about 3,893 times.
- If you stacked up 1 trillion dollar bills, the dollar tower would rise to 67,866 miles.
- If a cup of coffee costs $3, you could buy 333 billion cups of coffee with $1 trillion.
- If you had 1 trillion dollars, you could give every person on Earth approximately $125.
- One trillion grains of rice would weigh about 20,000 metric tons.
Keep in mind that all of these examples only illustrate the size of $1 trillion. The national debt is nearly 35 times that number.
James Madison once called a large national debt a "public curse."
"I go on the principle that a Public Debt is a Public curse and in a Rep. Govt. a greater than in any other."
We're certainly cursed to the tune of $35 trillion USD.
Thomas Jefferson said he considered “public debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared.”
In his Farewell Address, George Washington urged us to use debt sparingly – and, get this, actually pay it off as quickly as possible!
We failed to heed the warning of the Anti-federalist writer Brutus.
"I can scarcely contemplate a greater calamity that could befall this country, than to be loaded with a debt exceeding their ability ever to discharge. If this be a just remark, it is unwise and improvident to vest in the general government a power to borrow at discretion, without any limitation or restriction."
And here we are.
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