Name | National Debt to GDP Ratio | Population |
---|---|---|
Japan | 237.54% | 125,584,838 |
Venezuela | 214.45% | 29,266,991 |
Sudan | 177.87% | |
Greece | 174.15% | 10,316,637 |
Lebanon | 157.81% | 6,684,849 |
Italy | 133.43% | 60,262,770 |
Eritrea | 127.34% | 3,662,244 |
Cape Verde | 125.29% | 567,678 |
Mozambique | 124.46% | 33,089,461 |
Portugal | 119.46% | 10,140,570 |
Barbados | 117.27% | 288,023 |
Singapore | 109.37% | 5,943,546 |
United States | 106.70% | 334,805,269 |
Bhutan | 103.85% | 787,941 |
Cyprus | 101.04% | 1,223,387 |
Bahrain | 100.19% | 1,783,983 |
Belgium | 99.57% | 11,668,278 |
France | 99.20% | 65,584,518 |
Spain | 95.96% | 46,719,142 |
Jordan | 94.83% | 10,300,869 |
Jamaica | 94.13% | 2,985,094 |
Belize | 92.64% | 412,190 |
Angola | 90.46% | 35,027,343 |
Brazil | 90.36% | 215,353,593 |
Republic of the Congo | 90.19% | 5,797,805 |
Antigua And Barbuda | 88.35% | 99,509 |
Canada | 88.01% | 38,388,419 |
Egypt | 86.93% | 106,156,692 |
United Kingdom | 85.67% | 68,497,907 |
Aruba | 83.57% | 107,609 |
Sri Lanka | 82.99% | 21,575,842 |
Tunisia | 81.55% | 12,046,656 |
Mauritania | 80.61% | 4,901,981 |
Zambia | 80.50% | 19,470,234 |
Dominica | 79.84% | 72,344 |
Gambia | 78.67% | 2,558,482 |
San Marino | 77.12% | 34,085 |
Pakistan | 77.00% | 229,488,994 |
Argentina | 75.90% | 46,010,234 |
Sao Tome And Principe | 74.10% | 227,679 |
Sierra Leone | 72.37% | 8,306,436 |
Suriname | 72.05% | 596,831 |
Saint Lucia | 71.62% | 185,113 |
Saint Vincent And the Grenadines | 71.38% | 111,551 |
Uruguay | 71.34% | 3,496,016 |
Austria | 71.17% | 9,066,710 |
Croatia | 70.73% | 4,059,286 |
Montenegro | 70.58% | 627,950 |
Togo | 70.39% | 8,680,837 |
India | 69.04% | 1,406,631,776 |
El Salvador | 68.10% | 6,550,389 |
Mauritius | 67.50% | 1,274,727 |
Hungary | 66.62% | 9,606,259 |
Slovenia | 65.44% | 2,078,034 |
Albania | 65.13% | 2,866,374 |
Morocco | 65.11% | 37,772,756 |
Laos | 64.13% | 7,481,023 |
Burundi | 63.54% | 12,624,840 |
Djibouti | 62.99% | 1,016,097 |
Ireland | 62.42% | 5,020,199 |
Ukraine | 62.03% | 43,192,122 |
Senegal | 62.00% | 17,653,671 |
Ghana | 61.99% | 32,395,450 |
Maldives | 61.43% | 540,985 |
Oman | 61.29% | 5,323,993 |
Bahamas | 60.49% | 400,516 |
Nauru | 60.39% | 10,903 |
Finland | 59.88% | 5,554,960 |
Saint Kitts And Nevis | 59.49% | 53,871 |
Malawi | 59.01% | 20,180,839 |
Israel | 58.96% | 8,922,892 |
Gabon | 58.48% | 2,331,533 |
South Africa | 57.81% | 60,756,135 |
Puerto Rico | 57.70% | 2,829,812 |
Ethiopia | 57.43% | 120,812,698 |
Vietnam | 57.36% | 98,953,541 |
Guyana | 57.22% | 794,045 |
Bolivia | 57.11% | 11,992,656 |
Germany | 56.93% | 83,883,596 |
Malaysia | 56.32% | 33,181,072 |
Costa Rica | 56.15% | 5,182,354 |
Grenada | 56.12% | 113,475 |
Kyrgyzstan | 56.09% | 6,728,271 |
Niger | 55.60% | 26,083,660 |
Kenya | 55.50% | 56,215,221 |
China | 55.36% | 1,448,471,400 |
Guinea Bissau | 54.92% | 2,063,367 |
Yemen | 54.51% | 31,154,867 |
Seychelles | 54.49% | 99,426 |
Mexico | 54.11% | 131,562,772 |
Benin | 54.00% | 12,784,726 |
Qatar | 52.74% | 2,979,915 |
Vanuatu | 52.18% | 321,832 |
Netherlands | 52.04% | 17,211,447 |
Namibia | 51.60% | 2,633,874 |
Belarus | 51.08% | 9,432,800 |
Serbia | 50.95% | 8,653,016 |
Ivory Coast | 50.92% | 27,742,298 |
Iraq | 50.25% | 42,164,965 |
Fiji | 50.22% | 909,466 |
Rwanda | 50.00% | 13,600,464 |
Trinidad And Tobago | 49.75% | 1,406,585 |
Tajikistan | 49.46% | 9,957,464 |
Samoa | 49.44% | 202,239 |
Ecuador | 49.20% | 18,113,361 |
Colombia | 49.16% | 51,512,762 |
Armenia | 47.95% | 2,971,966 |
Poland | 47.48% | 37,739,785 |
Algeria | 46.92% | 45,350,148 |
Slovakia | 46.90% | 5,460,193 |
Liberia | 46.66% | 5,305,117 |
Guinea | 45.98% | 13,865,691 |
Georgia | 45.05% | 3,968,738 |
Uganda | 44.81% | 48,432,863 |
Chad | 42.91% | 17,413,580 |
Burkina Faso | 42.47% | 22,102,838 |
Malta | 42.46% | 444,033 |
Central African Republic | 42.25% | 5,016,678 |
Dominican Republic | 41.92% | 11,056,370 |
Thailand | 41.47% | 70,078,203 |
Eswatini | 41.11% | 1,184,817 |
Australia | 41.10% | 26,068,792 |
Madagascar | 41.02% | 29,178,077 |
Nicaragua | 40.88% | 6,779,100 |
Honduras | 40.80% | 10,221,247 |
South Korea | 40.54% | 51,329,899 |
North Macedonia | 40.48% | 2,081,304 |
Switzerland | 39.49% | 8,773,637 |
Myanmar | 39.19% | 55,227,143 |
Philippines | 39.10% | 112,508,994 |
Cameroon | 38.11% | 27,911,548 |
Romania | 37.99% | 19,031,335 |
Lesotho | 37.95% | 2,175,699 |
South Sudan | 37.81% | 11,618,511 |
Panama | 37.81% | 4,446,964 |
Papua New Guinea | 37.72% | 9,292,169 |
Equatorial Guinea | 37.49% | 1,496,662 |
Sweden | 37.23% | 10,218,971 |
Mali | 36.93% | 21,473,764 |
Norway | 36.75% | 5,511,370 |
Latvia | 36.66% | 1,848,837 |
Tanzania | 36.57% | 63,298,550 |
Bosnia And Herzegovina | 36.34% | 3,249,317 |
Haiti | 36.23% | 11,680,283 |
Comoros | 35.08% | 907,419 |
Bangladesh | 34.81% | 167,885,689 |
Taiwan | 33.91% | 23,888,595 |
Lithuania | 33.79% | 2,661,708 |
Denmark | 33.61% | 5,834,950 |
Iceland | 33.13% | 345,393 |
Nepal | 33.07% | 30,225,582 |
Czech Republic | 31.57% | 10,736,784 |
Turkmenistan | 30.25% | 6,201,943 |
Nigeria | 30.05% | 216,746,934 |
Iran | 30.04% | 86,022,837 |
Turkey | 29.93% | 85,561,976 |
Cambodia | 29.57% | 17,168,639 |
Indonesia | 29.29% | 279,134,505 |
Moldova | 28.82% | 4,013,171 |
New Zealand | 28.07% | 4,898,203 |
Peru | 27.18% | 33,684,208 |
Chile | 27.17% | 19,250,195 |
Guatemala | 24.76% | 18,584,039 |
Saudi Arabia | 23.71% | 35,844,909 |
Kiribati | 23.48% | 123,419 |
Marshall Islands | 23.37% | 60,057 |
Uzbekistan | 23.23% | 34,382,084 |
Paraguay | 22.37% | 7,305,843 |
Tuvalu | 21.81% | 12,066 |
Luxembourg | 21.61% | 642,371 |
Zimbabwe | 20.99% | 15,331,428 |
Kazakhstan | 20.90% | 19,205,043 |
Bulgaria | 19.33% | 6,844,597 |
United Arab Emirates | 19.20% | 10,081,785 |
Micronesia | 18.41% | 117,489 |
Kuwait | 17.78% | 4,380,326 |
Azerbaijan | 17.59% | 10,300,205 |
Solomon Islands | 14.56% | 721,159 |
DR Congo | 14.01% | 95,240,792 |
Russia | 13.79% | 145,805,947 |
Botswana | 12.78% | 2,441,162 |
Estonia | 7.61% | 1,321,910 |
Afghanistan | 6.88% | 40,754,388 |
Brunei | 2.63% | 445,431 |
Japan may not be doing as bad as it looks.I didn't know that japan was so fiscally unbalanced. Afghanistan is looking pretty good. What America needs is more tax cuts
And they have been doing just that since the collapse of their equity and asset markets since the late '80s of the last century.Japan may not be doing as bad as it looks.
I believe they owe their debt to themselves.
Afghanistan is only looking good because no credible financial institution will underwrite any debt for them.I didn't know that japan was so fiscally unbalanced. Afghanistan is looking pretty good. What America needs is more tax cuts
But that still doesn’t reveal the entire debt story. To really understand the country’s financial health, you also have to include unfunded liabilities. These are payments the government has promised to make in the future, including Social Security and Medicare. That adds another $160 trillion in liabilities to Uncle Sam’s balance sheet.Especially when the GDP is a bunch of fluff like ours. So much of our GDP is service sector. I think only 10%, if that, is from manufacturing. So, we have a very small portion of our GDP related to producing real wealth.”
The honest way to default is to admit you’re broke and simply not pay.It’s not going to be paid. And so what’s going to happen? Well, it’s going to be defaulted, either honestly or dishonestly.”
That creates a whole new set of problems. Peter said the realization the US government is simply going to keep inflating will cause a run on the US dollar and US Treasuries.Of course, it’s not going to do that. No one in Washington is willing to be honest with creditors. So, the other way is through inflation. And that’s what’s going to happen. We are going to inflate the debt away.”
Peter said there’s a big difference between getting repaid honestly out of taxation and getting paid dishonestly through inflation.But they will be concerned because they realize that we can’t repay the debt honestly through taxation because there’s just not enough money available from the taxpayer. When you’ve got the federal government, and the state and local governments, all looking for the same taxpayer, and that guy is broke, how are you going to repay this debt? You can’t. It’s going to be repudiated through inflation.”
Imagine a simple society with one taxpayer, a creditor and the government. The government borrows $100 from the creditor. Now the taxpayer is on the hook for $100. If the government goes ahead and taxes the taxpayer, the creditor gets $100 and everybody is happy. (Except perhaps the taxpayer who is out $100.) Now, the government could decide it doesn’t want to tax the taxpayer. The government needs his vote. So instead, the government prints $100 out of thin air and hands it to the lender. In that case, the taxpayer has $100 and so does the creditor.And if you think it’s going to be the latter, then you want to get out of Dodge.”
Peter said he’s always gotten a big kick out of people who say we don’t have to pay the massive government debt back and claim the government can just keep borrowing indefinitely.Now the taxpayer, when he goes to spend his $100, well, he only gets $50 worth of stuff. So, he’s taken a loss. He doesn’t lose as much as if the government had taken his entire $100 and given it to the creditor. But he lost half his money, even though the government took nothing. But now the creditor, when he gets paid $100, he didn’t really get his money back. Because now prices have doubled. He can only buy $50 worth of stuff. Now, he got more money than he would have gotten had the government just defaulted and given him nothing. But because the government didn’t do that, they inflated — he still gets something. But he’s lost half of his purchasing power. That is a real loss. And that loss is going to be factored into the willingness of US creditors to continue to hold US Treasuries.”
So, who is going to continue to loan the US money if we tell them right off the bat, “You’re never getting paid back.”?How can that be? If we don’t have to repay it, it’s really not debt. We’re really not borrowing if we don’t have to pay it back. And the thing is — if it’s true that we can borrow money and never pay it back, what kind of idiot is loaning us the money if we’re never going to pay it back? Because the important part about making a loan is getting paid back. That’s what it really boils down to. … The key is to get your money back.”
In this podcast, Peter also says the stock market is rotating, not crashing, weak economic data will make it harder for the Fed to tighten, the Fed may start blaming rising oil prices on a slowing economy, and 6 more weeks of winter is nothing compared to the crypto winter ahead.In other words, the reason we can keep on doing this is because it’s a giant Ponzi scheme. But again, if it’s a giant Ponzi scheme, why do people willingly participate? It’s because they don’t realize it’s a Ponzi scheme. They think they’re going to get paid back. When they realize they’re going to be paid back in monopoly money, they’re not going to want to lend. In fact, they’re not going to want to hold on to these Treasuries and the only buyer is going to be the Federal Reserve. And that’s when the printing press is going to overdrive and the dollar is going to fall through the floor.”
So do most sovereign nations.Japan may not be doing as bad as it looks.
I believe they owe their debt to themselves.
Can't wait for some numbers wonk to calculate just what my own personal share isWhat is striking is the Debt/GDP :
Name National Debt to GDP Ratio Population Japan 237.54% 125,584,838 Venezuela 214.45% 29,266,991 Sudan 177.87% Greece 174.15% 10,316,637 Lebanon 157.81% 6,684,849 Italy 133.43% 60,262,770 Eritrea 127.34% 3,662,244 Cape Verde 125.29% 567,678 Mozambique 124.46% 33,089,461 Portugal 119.46% 10,140,570 Barbados 117.27% 288,023 Singapore 109.37% 5,943,546 United States 106.70% 334,805,269 Bhutan 103.85% 787,941 Cyprus 101.04% 1,223,387 Bahrain 100.19% 1,783,983 Belgium 99.57% 11,668,278 France 99.20% 65,584,518 Spain 95.96% 46,719,142 Jordan 94.83% 10,300,869 Jamaica 94.13% 2,985,094 Belize 92.64% 412,190 Angola 90.46% 35,027,343 Brazil 90.36% 215,353,593 Republic of the Congo 90.19% 5,797,805 Antigua And Barbuda 88.35% 99,509 Canada 88.01% 38,388,419 Egypt 86.93% 106,156,692 United Kingdom 85.67% 68,497,907 Aruba 83.57% 107,609 Sri Lanka 82.99% 21,575,842 Tunisia 81.55% 12,046,656 Mauritania 80.61% 4,901,981 Zambia 80.50% 19,470,234 Dominica 79.84% 72,344 Gambia 78.67% 2,558,482 San Marino 77.12% 34,085 Pakistan 77.00% 229,488,994 Argentina 75.90% 46,010,234 Sao Tome And Principe 74.10% 227,679 Sierra Leone 72.37% 8,306,436 Suriname 72.05% 596,831 Saint Lucia 71.62% 185,113 Saint Vincent And the Grenadines 71.38% 111,551 Uruguay 71.34% 3,496,016 Austria 71.17% 9,066,710 Croatia 70.73% 4,059,286 Montenegro 70.58% 627,950 Togo 70.39% 8,680,837 India 69.04% 1,406,631,776 El Salvador 68.10% 6,550,389 Mauritius 67.50% 1,274,727 Hungary 66.62% 9,606,259 Slovenia 65.44% 2,078,034 Albania 65.13% 2,866,374 Morocco 65.11% 37,772,756 Laos 64.13% 7,481,023 Burundi 63.54% 12,624,840 Djibouti 62.99% 1,016,097 Ireland 62.42% 5,020,199 Ukraine 62.03% 43,192,122 Senegal 62.00% 17,653,671 Ghana 61.99% 32,395,450 Maldives 61.43% 540,985 Oman 61.29% 5,323,993 Bahamas 60.49% 400,516 Nauru 60.39% 10,903 Finland 59.88% 5,554,960 Saint Kitts And Nevis 59.49% 53,871 Malawi 59.01% 20,180,839 Israel 58.96% 8,922,892 Gabon 58.48% 2,331,533 South Africa 57.81% 60,756,135 Puerto Rico 57.70% 2,829,812 Ethiopia 57.43% 120,812,698 Vietnam 57.36% 98,953,541 Guyana 57.22% 794,045 Bolivia 57.11% 11,992,656 Germany 56.93% 83,883,596 Malaysia 56.32% 33,181,072 Costa Rica 56.15% 5,182,354 Grenada 56.12% 113,475 Kyrgyzstan 56.09% 6,728,271 Niger 55.60% 26,083,660 Kenya 55.50% 56,215,221 China 55.36% 1,448,471,400 Guinea Bissau 54.92% 2,063,367 Yemen 54.51% 31,154,867 Seychelles 54.49% 99,426 Mexico 54.11% 131,562,772 Benin 54.00% 12,784,726 Qatar 52.74% 2,979,915 Vanuatu 52.18% 321,832 Netherlands 52.04% 17,211,447 Namibia 51.60% 2,633,874 Belarus 51.08% 9,432,800 Serbia 50.95% 8,653,016 Ivory Coast 50.92% 27,742,298 Iraq 50.25% 42,164,965 Fiji 50.22% 909,466 Rwanda 50.00% 13,600,464 Trinidad And Tobago 49.75% 1,406,585 Tajikistan 49.46% 9,957,464 Samoa 49.44% 202,239 Ecuador 49.20% 18,113,361 Colombia 49.16% 51,512,762 Armenia 47.95% 2,971,966 Poland 47.48% 37,739,785 Algeria 46.92% 45,350,148 Slovakia 46.90% 5,460,193 Liberia 46.66% 5,305,117 Guinea 45.98% 13,865,691 Georgia 45.05% 3,968,738 Uganda 44.81% 48,432,863 Chad 42.91% 17,413,580 Burkina Faso 42.47% 22,102,838 Malta 42.46% 444,033 Central African Republic 42.25% 5,016,678 Dominican Republic 41.92% 11,056,370 Thailand 41.47% 70,078,203 Eswatini 41.11% 1,184,817 Australia 41.10% 26,068,792 Madagascar 41.02% 29,178,077 Nicaragua 40.88% 6,779,100 Honduras 40.80% 10,221,247 South Korea 40.54% 51,329,899 North Macedonia 40.48% 2,081,304 Switzerland 39.49% 8,773,637 Myanmar 39.19% 55,227,143 Philippines 39.10% 112,508,994 Cameroon 38.11% 27,911,548 Romania 37.99% 19,031,335 Lesotho 37.95% 2,175,699 South Sudan 37.81% 11,618,511 Panama 37.81% 4,446,964 Papua New Guinea 37.72% 9,292,169 Equatorial Guinea 37.49% 1,496,662 Sweden 37.23% 10,218,971 Mali 36.93% 21,473,764 Norway 36.75% 5,511,370 Latvia 36.66% 1,848,837 Tanzania 36.57% 63,298,550 Bosnia And Herzegovina 36.34% 3,249,317 Haiti 36.23% 11,680,283 Comoros 35.08% 907,419 Bangladesh 34.81% 167,885,689 Taiwan 33.91% 23,888,595 Lithuania 33.79% 2,661,708 Denmark 33.61% 5,834,950 Iceland 33.13% 345,393 Nepal 33.07% 30,225,582 Czech Republic 31.57% 10,736,784 Turkmenistan 30.25% 6,201,943 Nigeria 30.05% 216,746,934 Iran 30.04% 86,022,837 Turkey 29.93% 85,561,976 Cambodia 29.57% 17,168,639 Indonesia 29.29% 279,134,505 Moldova 28.82% 4,013,171 New Zealand 28.07% 4,898,203 Peru 27.18% 33,684,208 Chile 27.17% 19,250,195 Guatemala 24.76% 18,584,039 Saudi Arabia 23.71% 35,844,909 Kiribati 23.48% 123,419 Marshall Islands 23.37% 60,057 Uzbekistan 23.23% 34,382,084 Paraguay 22.37% 7,305,843 Tuvalu 21.81% 12,066 Luxembourg 21.61% 642,371 Zimbabwe 20.99% 15,331,428 Kazakhstan 20.90% 19,205,043 Bulgaria 19.33% 6,844,597 United Arab Emirates 19.20% 10,081,785 Micronesia 18.41% 117,489 Kuwait 17.78% 4,380,326 Azerbaijan 17.59% 10,300,205 Solomon Islands 14.56% 721,159 DR Congo 14.01% 95,240,792 Russia 13.79% 145,805,947 Botswana 12.78% 2,441,162 Estonia 7.61% 1,321,910 Afghanistan 6.88% 40,754,388 Brunei 2.63% 445,431
Peter Schiff: The Dollar Is Monopoly Money Supported By A Ponzi Scheme
THURSDAY, FEB 03, 2022 - 11:20 AM
Via SchiffGold.com,
The national debt quietly pushed past $30 trillion on Jan. 31. But that is only the tip of the debt iceberg. The American taxpayer is on the hook for a lot more than that. In his podcast, Peter Schiff said US government borrowing and spending has turned the dollar into monopoly money propped up by a massive Ponzi Scheme.
On top of the federal government’s $30 trillion of debt, you have to add state and local government debt totaling about another $3.2 trillion. That brings the total debt to GDP ratio in the US to 142 percent. Peter called this a “shockingly high number.”
But that still doesn’t reveal the entire debt story. To really understand the country’s financial health, you also have to include unfunded liabilities. These are payments the government has promised to make in the future, including Social Security and Medicare. That adds another $160 trillion in liabilities to Uncle Sam’s balance sheet.
If you take the unfunded liabilities and add them to the funded debt, you’re at nearly $200 trillion.
As Peter said, this is completely unplayable.
The honest way to default is to admit you’re broke and simply not pay.
That creates a whole new set of problems. Peter said the realization the US government is simply going to keep inflating will cause a run on the US dollar and US Treasuries.
A lot of people, including proponents of MMT, believe that we don’t really have to worry about credit quality. The US government will never default. Since the US borrows in its own currency, it can print virtually as much money as it needs to. Creditors won’t really be concerned, no matter how much debt the US government runs up.
Peter said there’s a big difference between getting repaid honestly out of taxation and getting paid dishonestly through inflation.
Imagine a simple society with one taxpayer, a creditor and the government. The government borrows $100 from the creditor. Now the taxpayer is on the hook for $100. If the government goes ahead and taxes the taxpayer, the creditor gets $100 and everybody is happy. (Except perhaps the taxpayer who is out $100.) Now, the government could decide it doesn’t want to tax the taxpayer. The government needs his vote. So instead, the government prints $100 out of thin air and hands it to the lender. In that case, the taxpayer has $100 and so does the creditor.
But now there’s another problem. The amount of goods and services in the economy hasn’t changed. Prices will double because the government has doubled the money supply.
Peter said he’s always gotten a big kick out of people who say we don’t have to pay the massive government debt back and claim the government can just keep borrowing indefinitely.
So, who is going to continue to loan the US money if we tell them right off the bat, “You’re never getting paid back.”?
Apparently, the plan is to pay the current lenders back by borrowing money from new people.
In this podcast, Peter also says the stock market is rotating, not crashing, weak economic data will make it harder for the Fed to tighten, the Fed may start blaming rising oil prices on a slowing economy, and 6 more weeks of winter is nothing compared to the crypto winter ahead.