This was my source : https://www.thebalance.com/us-debt-by-p ... nt-3306296Forty Two wrote:Nearly 100% for Obama -- http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/searc ... dYear=2016 He's added over $9 trillion to the total debt, and it was about $10.6 trillion when he took office.\\Brian Peacock wrote:Obama increased the national debt by 68%. G.W. Bush increased it by 101%. Trump's plan to cut taxes and increase military spending will put him in the same ball park.Forty Two wrote:That's a huge problem with running up debt, which the Obama Admnistration did by getting us up over $20 trillion. But that has nothing to do with China or Japan selling their US Treasuries. It doesn't matter to us who holds the bonds. What matters is if nobody was willing to buy any new bonds.Śiva wrote: And doesn't a higher interest rate reduce the 'debt ceiling' the US operates under which could cripple or outright collapse the US economy as the interest on your debt alone meets or exceeds your tax revenues.
Bush doubled the national debt too, but he only added about half the total amount that Obama has added - http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/searc ... dYear=2009 (Bush added about $5 trillion or so, and Obama is on pace to break $10 trillion added).
I inputted the same dates for each president Starting at inauguration and ending at Obama's inauguration for Bush, and December 7, 2016 for Obama. So, Obama still has about six weeks to go, and it's racking up, of course.
If we give each President a pass for their first year, figuring most of their first year budget was set outside of their control, then here is Bush's number - http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/searc ... dYear=2010 (less than $6 trillion added for 8 years) And, Obama would be here at the moment http://treasurydirect.gov/NP/debt/searc ... dYear=2016 (12.3 trillion to almost $20 trillion, or about $7.7 trillion added, with one year to go, and so he'd probable wind up at about $8.5 to $9 trillion -- still much more than Bush).
those are the numbers from the US Treasury -- what's your source?
The WAR ON TERR-ROAR (you have to say that with the voice of the bloke who does the action movie trailers btw: it's the law), the WAR ON TERR-ROAR is a perpetual war with a concomitant perpetual increase in military spending built in. Cutting taxes in economic hard times is always expensive and the jury isn't just out on whether cutting taxes for the wealthy benefits the poor, it gave its judgement on that and retired to the Panama years ago - trickle-down doesn't work (nor is it a rather disappointing sequel to watership down). Sure some regulations are bonkers, people are bonkers, but all regulations were brought in for a reason, to balance competing interests and to ensure a level playing field. Getting rid of swathes of regulations may make it easier for people to make money and business to turn a profit, but it may also unbalance that seesaw of competing interests such that it's easier to rip-off and get ripped-off because regulatory shortfalls mean the interests of profits perpetually outweigh the welfare of those who are consequentially effected by profit-making. My point is, that Trump's general conservative agenda is not going to reduce borrowing and simultaneously boost jobs - not without divine intervention anyway - you can't have Austerity and pay down the debt without first undertaking an economic commitment to effectively make everyone poorer, and you can't have economy-stimulating investment without borrowing, particularly when your level of debt so far above your ability to pay that the whole concept starts to look kinda surreal.
Trump will cost America money, just like the presidents before him - and he will probably cost America more money than previous presidents because that's how things are set up, that's how money works. The system of international usury must be fed and watered - it's what keeps the lights on.