Your share = $703,000 per person. So, cough it up! ---- A new study by University of California-San Diego economics professor James Hamilton finds that the United States has over $70 trillion in off-balance sheet liabilities--an amount nearly six times the on-balance-sheet debt figure. The Treasury debt outstanding is $16.74 trillion. Of that, $4.84 trillion is money the U.S. owes itself. For that reason, explains Matt Phillips of Quartz, âmany analysts tend to focus on the $11.91 trillion in debt that is publicly available to be traded.â Hamiltonâs study, however, examined the federal liabilities that are not included in the governmentâs officially reported numbers. Specifically, he examined the federal governmentâs âsupport for housing, other loan guarantees, deposit insurance, actions taken by the Federal Reserve, and government trust funds.â Not surprisingly, Hamilton found that Medicare and Social Security represent the bulk of future U.S. debt obligations, coming in at $27.6 trillion and $26.5 trillion respectively. The study's $70 trillion debt estimate may actually be overly optimistic. Boston University economics professor Laurence J. Kotlikoff, who served on President Ronald Reaganâs Council of Economic Advisers, says the nationâs true debt obligations are three times that figure. "If you add up all the promises that have been made for spending obligations, including defense expenditures, and you subtract all the taxes that we expect to collect, the difference is $211 trillion. That's the fiscal gap," Kotlikoff told National Public Radio. "That's our true indebtedness." Hamilton concedes that other scholars may arrive at different figures. âSome may argue that the current off-balance-sheet liabilities of the U.S. federal government are smaller than those tabulated here; others could arrive at larger numbers," writes Hamilton. "But one thing seems undeniableâthey are huge.â http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2013/08/04/Study-U-S-Debt-Obligations-70-Trillion
Solution; Fed sells 500 year bonds worth $211 trillion There should be some pensions funds looking for long term safe investments
Many folks have included the OBS liabilities before. ZH talks about it regularly. But the sheep haven't woken up yet, so... on with the show.
They should sell them quick before rates rise. Is the market big enough to handle it? And, are there buyers who will buy a never ending (for all practical purposes) bond?
That's because 1. the MSM doesn't understand basic finance. 2. The MSM has no interest in understanding basic finance.
At best, they may have half that right. But they could be 100% wrong. And, since we know that both of them are almost always wrong......