With the U.S. National Debt closing in on theĀ $20 trillion mark, there has been a lot of conversation in Washington about debt and its role in government. And most of that conversation right now revolves around President-elect Donald Trump.
On one hand, the Trump campaign had early rhetoric in the Presidential campaign that the elimination of the deficit and existing government debt would be paramount if elected. The Trump administration has also been highly critical of the Federal Reserve, saying that the Fedās policies create aĀ āfalse economyā. As a result, some see Trump embracing the unique opportunity toĀ put his stampĀ on how the Federal Reserve does business in early 2017.
On the other hand, even manyĀ conservative think tanksĀ are concerned about what Trump policies mean for government debt. Rebuilding infrastructure is not cheap, and widely-cited estimates see the national debt increasing by anywhere fromĀ $5.3 trillionĀ toĀ $11.5 trillionĀ over the next 10 years.
HOW MUCH GOVERNMENT DEBT IS ON YOU?
While giant numbers like $20 trillion sound abstract and meaningless, Visual Capitalist’s Jeff Desjardins notes that converting them to debt-per-capita can make things more intuitive. The per-capita amount shows the amount of debt that exists per citizen, and makes things plain and simple.
Todayās infographic fromĀ HowMuch.net, a cost information site, shows government debt-per-capita in every country in the world, including the United States.
Here are the countries where people owe theĀ most debt per person:
- Japan: $85,694.87 per person
- Ireland: $67,147.59 per person
- Singapore: $56,112.75 per person
- Belgium: $44,202.75 per person
- United States: $42,503.98 per person
- Canada: $42,142.61 per person
- Italy: $40,461.11 per person
- Iceland: $39,731.65 per person
- Australia: $38,769.98 per person
- United Kingdom: $36,206.11 per person
Of course, debt-per-capita isnāt the only lens to view government debt.
Weāve previously shown global debt byĀ percentage per country, government debtĀ compared to tax revenues, accumulated debt compared toĀ markets and the money supply, and a map scaled toĀ debt-to-GDP ratios.