Ziggurat
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jun 19, 2003
- Messages
- 61,589
Last time I looked it up, the Chinese held 11%, about $800B.
China isn't the only overseas holder of US debt, which is why I didn't say China.
The vast majority is held domestically. Hmm, how to reconcile your 'huge' with my 'vast'?
Total foreign ownership of US treasuries was almost 28% as of 2008. In addition, since the US government itself held over 49% of those securities, the foreign ownership of debt owed by the government to anyone but itself would appear to top 50%. Intra-governmental debt is essentially just a book-keeping exercise.
So, yeah, I'd say that qualifies as a huge portion, even restricted to 28%.
And lately, our govt bonds have been selling for close to 0%.
I'm not sure what qualifies as "close", but I don't think this is true. The yield for treasuries on the secondary market can drop to zero or even go negative if interest rates rise or even if buyers expect them to in the future. But the yield is not the same as the interest rate. Newly-issued long-term securities aren't selling at interest rates that I would call close to 0%. And very short-term debt won't get retired, it will get rolled over, and even if interest rates are low now, they won't stay that way forever.
I guess I don't see the harm in raising debt levels interest freeley.
Our debt is not interest-free. Not even our new debt.