Bruce said:I know I'm going to regret asking this, but could someone please explain, in terms that a humble little PhD chemist can understand, what a deficit of 2.6 trillion actually means? Where the money comes from to pay it?
The $2.6 trillion is over ten years. That's an average of $260 billion dollars every year.
The money comes from selling Treasury bonds. These bonds are sold through the Fed at auction. They pay a fixed interest rate over a certain period of time. The interest rate is set by the Fed, and there are various time periods for maturity offered. The longest one is 28 years.
If people and bond brokers don't buy all of the bonds (and traditionally they only purchase a small fraction of the bonds issued), the Fed purchases the rest. They do this by ordering new money printed by the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. The new money goes into the Treasury and the Fed gets the bonds.
Of course, the money needs to be paid back. Interest is paid every year, and the original bond amount is paid after the term is up. So that money goes into the Fed's coffers. But, all of the profits from the Fed go back into the Treasury. So as long as the Fed doesn't need it for operating funds (and, chances are, it won't), the Treasury is essentially paying off itself.
The effect of all this is that, essentially, it's printing the money. It affects you because it causes inflation.
Were I a six year old, I would ask something like, "Why doesn't the government just go to the mint and print out 2.6 trillion dollars in cash?"
Because they don't go to the Mint (or the Bureau of Engraving and Printing; the Mint does coins, not bills) to print money anymore; the Fed does. Constitutionally, Treasury notes have to be backed by gold and silver. When they passed the Federal Reserve Act in 1913, they were still at least pretending to follow the Constitution. But effectively, that's what's happening.