What Would Happen If USA Stopped Paying Its Debt? - YouTube

Channel: The Infographics Show

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The United States has more than $21 trillion in national debt. Let’s try and get our
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heads around just how much money that is. Firstly, what’s a trillion? A trillion is
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1 thousand billion, or 1 followed by 12 zeros. That’s a big number, so let’s break it
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down. If we assume you are a millionaire and you have all your money in $1,000 bills, that’s
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1,000 of them to make up your million…and if you stacked the bills on top of each other,
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that stack would be just over 4 inches high. You’d be pretty happy! Now let’s say you
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had 1,000 of those stacks making you a billionaire. The cash would now be 358 feet tall, which
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is roughly the height of a 35-story building. And what if you had a thousand of those stacks,
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making you a trillionaire? Well then your cash stack would be 67.9 miles high, which
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is more than 9 times the height that a commercial airline flies. Now that’s just 1 trillion
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dollars and the US debt is a cool 21 trillion. In today’s episode of The Infographics Show,
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we’re going to be looking at: What Would Happen If The Us Defaulted On Its Debt?
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You don’t just wake up one day and find yourself owing a stack of money that would
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stretch to the moon. It takes a lot of spending. 50 years ago, the US national debt was around
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$350 billion and the 1 trillion mile-stone was not reached until the early 1980’s.
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But that’s still a big jump to arrive at today’s 21 trillion. With big tax cuts,
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spending on things such as war, and then with economic stimulus packages, it all adds up.
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The debt rises because if the US government spends more money than it collects in taxes,
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then it needs to make up the shortfall by selling US Treasury bonds to investors. These
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investors are typically other countries.
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So what’s defaulting all about? When a country defaults on its debt, it's called a sovereign
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default. If the US were to default, it would essentially stop paying the money it owed
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to the investors of the US Treasury bonds. There‘s a lot of speculation online about
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what would happen if the US stopped making these payments, and though many of the major
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media outlets have run features exploring this question, no one really knows exactly
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what would take place. The general consensus is that world markets would plunge and global
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interest rates would be considerably hitched up. And of course the impact would be felt
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by the US's creditors…those other countries, who are owed the money. Let’s take a look
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at 5 potential knock on effects, that would occur as a result of the US defaulting on
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its debt.
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Depression and unemployment - The Treasury and Federal Reserve, would make their way
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through banks and eventually blow a hole through the Main Street economy. The unemployment
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rate would rise and huge amounts of uncertainty would take center stage. The stock market
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would suffer, with stock prices falling, as investors fled to other countries for safer
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stock or gold investments. Recession would be on the economic horizon.
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Public service disruption – There would be no money to pay salaries or benefits for
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federal or military personnel and retirees, social security recipients, Medicare bills,
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student loans, tax refunds, and payments to keep government facilities open. The result
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would create a great deal of disruption and unrest across the American public.
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Affect on Business - A U.S. debt default would significantly raise the cost of doing business.
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Companies would have to pay higher interest rates on loans and bonds to compete with the
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higher interest rates of the U.S. Treasury. There would be price increases on goods and
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services and rising inflation. Business would suffer and as a result there would be higher
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unemployment.
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US Dollar Impact – There would be mass selling of the U.S. dollar, an event that would threaten
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the greenback's status as the world's reserve currency. Prices for everyday commodities
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would go up, our groceries, clothes, and fuel, all would rise. And we’d be saying goodbye
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to low mortgage rates. All of this would affect buying patterns, which again would further
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impact the economy.
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Global Markets Impacted – The US economy has far reaching impact so it would not only
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be the homeland where the effects would be felt. According to CNN Money, who referenced
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treasury numbers in a 2016 feature, foreign nations hold just over 32% of the US debt.
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The list is long but China and Japan stand out with over 50% of the 32%. As an example,
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Japan owns about $1.14 trillion. This is equivalent to 20% of its annual economic output and would
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shake the Japanese economy for sure.
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This speculation is all fascinating, we hear you say, but do we have anything to base the
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assumptions on? Let’s look at a real example in another country. The most recent debt crisis
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was in Greece in 2015. The country formally defaulted on a $1.7 billion payment to the
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International Monetary Fund in Athens. Nowhere near a trillion, but it was still hugely disruptive
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to this Balkan tourist destination. The Guardian ran an article last year, looking at the effects
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of the Greek default. They referenced a study by the DiaNeosis thinktank, which found that
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in 2015, 15% of the population, or 1.6 million people, earned below the extreme poverty threshold,
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when 6 years previously, in 2009, that number did not exceed 2.2%. And according to the
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Bank of Greece, the net wealth of Greek households fell by a staggering 40% in the same period.
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Though unemployment did drop, it is still the highest in the European Union at 22%.
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What did this mean to an everyday Greek person? One example is Chryssa Christodoulaki, a French-trained
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hairdresser had paid into a pension fund for almost 45 years. Her pension started out at
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€1,750 a month. Then it was cut to €1,430 a month, and then cut again to €960 a month.
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It’s not a pretty picture, but then how realistic is the prospect of the US defaulting
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on its debt? From everything we researched, it certainly seems highly unlikely. One reason
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is that all U.S. government debt is denominated in U.S. dollar assets, but a more intriguing
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reason the US would apparently never default, in the words of Alan Greenspan, an American
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economist who served as Chairman of the Federal Reserve of the United States from 1987 to
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2006, is that "The United States can pay any debt it has because it can always print money
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to do that. So there is zero probability of default." We’re not entirely sure how true
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that is, but it’s certainly an interesting idea to consider.
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So, what do you think would happen if the US defaulted on its debt? War? Famine? The
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Apocalypse? Let us know your thoughts in the comments! Also, be sure to check out our other
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video called How is Life Different for Billionaires?! Thanks for watching, and, as always, don’t
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forget to like, share, and subscribe. See you next time!