Who's to blame for the national debt? How about everybody?

The gargantuan national debt is finally starting to matter.

Usual wobbles in the market for Treasury securities suggest the US government may finally be issuing more debt than investors can absorb. The annual deficit normally shrinks in a year with strong economic growth, yet it ballooned 23% in 2023 to $1.7 trillion, the biggest budget hole ever for a year with no emergencies. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell says addressing the $34 trillion national debt should be an “urgent” priority.

Yet it’s not. Virtually all of the spending bills Congress has passed or will pass this year will rely on vast amounts of borrowing to keep the government running. Neither Joe Biden nor Donald Trump, the likely presidential candidates, highlights debt reduction as a top agenda item. Each political party, meanwhile, blames the other for the massive debt, with many politicians obscuring the whole issue with doublespeak.

Yahoo Finance decided to settle at least one question: Who’s responsible for all that debt in the first place? The unsurprising answer: just about everybody. Republicans and Democrats alike have passed laws and imposed policies that have pushed the debt from healthy levels to unmanageable ones during the last 25 years. Many voters bemoan the vast national debt, yet the electorate has broadly supported — and benefited from — many of the policy moves that created it, through lower taxes and plusher government benefits.

We asked the budget hawks at the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB) to help identify the specific laws and other programs that have pushed the debt to unmanageable levels. As CRFB points out, the US government actually ran a surplus (for the last time) in 2001, and the budget outlook was upbeat. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that, on the trajectory at the time, the whole federal debt would be paid off by 2009.

Then came 23 years of tax cuts and spending hikes that in retrospect look like fiscal insanity, pushing the amount of federal debt held by the public from $3.3 trillion in 2001 to $26.3 trillion at the end of fiscal 2023. There’s another $7 trillion in “intra-governmental debt” held by government agencies such as the Social Security Trust Fund, with the total national debt hitting $34.2 trillion as of Feb. 1, 2024. For this analysis, we’re addressing the amount of publicly held debt, which represents all the Treasury securities traded in financial markets.

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CRFB finds that 77% of the actions accounting for all the new debt since 2001 were bipartisan, with meaningful support from both Democrats and Republicans. Much of that was fiscal stimulus following the 2008 financial crash and the outbreak of COVID in 2020. Partisan Democratic actions — mostly spending hikes — account for 12% of that additional debt, while partisan Republican changes — mostly tax cuts — account for 8%.