z Facts.com
 KNOW THE FACTS.  GET THE SOURCE.
About Printable
 
 
  Home
Economy
Mortgage Crisis
Economics
Jobs
National Debt ♦
Debt Graph
Deficit
Debt Clocks
Presidents
Service Cuts
Wealth, Poverty
Social Security
Pensions
 
  Don’t Miss:
 
 National Debt Graph

National Debt

A Social Security Crisis?

Iraq War Reasons

Corn Ethanol

Hurricanes & Global Warming

Baghdad, Iraq

Iraq War Coalition Casualties

Crude Oil Prices

Gas Prices
 
   

   The Gross National Debt

  Links    Quotes    FAQ     Timeline  
  National Debt History (Graph):  White House data show the gross national debt hit a 47 year low just as President Reagan was taking office. It climbed steadily under Reagan and G. H. W. Bush, declined under Clinton and made a quick U-turn under G. W. Bush.

The Gross Deficit vs. the political Deficit Lite The real deficit remains near its peak and over half a trillion $ per year.

National Debt Clocks:  The Gross National Debt is over $8 trillion and climbing. More than $1.5 trillion of the debt is owed to the Social Security trust fund and indirectly to those who have paid their FICA taxes.

Presidential Contributions to the Gross National Debt:  The gross federal debt now stands at 63.5% of GDP. Of that, 33.5 percentage points were contributed by Reagan-Bush, 6 points by G. W. Bush, and 6.1 points by printing money. The remaining 18 points are left over from WWII.

An Introduction to the Debt Problem (PDF):  President Reagan came to power claiming the trillion-dollar national debt was the country's central problem. He then proceeded to double it. President Bush has predicted he will set a 50 year debt record—if re-elected.
 
 
 
poppy-h
. .
 
 


http://zfacts.com/p/331.html | 01/06/09 10:40 GMT
Modified: Thu, 25 Jan 2007 06:24:34 GMT
 
Carbon-cover-200s
FREE e-Book
Fix the Climate
Charge It to OPEC
Bear with OPEC?!
 
 
.
 
  
Peterson-Running-Empty
Amazon

Secretary of Commerce under Nixon, Peterson explains the national debt by the Republicans' pursuit of reckless supply-side economics and the Democrats' unwillingness to consider limits on entitlements.
more books
   
 
  zFacts Home