| US national debt exceeds US$31 trillion amid rising  interest rates
 WASHINGTON (Xinhua) -- The US national debt has  surpassed US$31 trillion for the first time amid higher interest rates, raising  concerns about fiscal sustainability.The total public debt outstanding  reached US$31.1 trillion on Monday, including US$24.3 trillion in debt held by  the public and US$6.8 trillion in intergovernmental holdings, said the US  Treasury Department’s daily treasury statement released Tuesday.
 
                    
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                      | US  dollar banknotes in Washington. |  “This is a new record no one  should be proud of,” said Maya MacGuineas, president of budget watch group the  Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, noting that it was only five years  ago that the United States marked US$20 trillion in gross debt.Just roughly eight months ago,  the total public debt outstanding exceeded US$30 trillion, hitting a fiscal  milestone.
 The current federal government’s  debt limit is about US$31.4 trillion, after the US Congress passed legislation  in December last year to raise the limit and avert a looming debt default.
 “In the past 18 months, we’ve  witnessed inflation rise to a 40-year high, interest rates climbing in part to  combat this inflation, and several budget-busting pieces of legislation and  executive actions,” said MacGuineas.
 “While much of that new borrowing  was necessary to combat COVID, we are now past the most severe challenges of  the pandemic, and it is time to budget responsibly -- yet we are still  borrowing,” she said. “We are addicted to debt.”
 MacGuineas noted that in 2022  alone, the US Congress and President Joe Biden have approved a combined US$1.9  trillion in new borrowing, and Biden has approved US$4.9 trillion in new  deficits since taking office.
 In an article published Tuesday,  the Peter G. Peterson Foundation noted that US$31 trillion is more than the  value of the economies of China, Japan, Germany and Britain combined, and  amounts to US$236,000 of debt per household in the United States.
 “The coronavirus pandemic rapidly  accelerated our fiscal challenges, but we were already on an unsustainable  path, with structural drivers that existed long before the pandemic,” the  foundation said. “America’s high and rising debt matters because it threatens  our economic future.”
 MacGuineas also argued that for  decades, US lawmakers have chosen to “pass politically easy policies” rather  than face the challenges of true governing.
 “Our nation faces significant  fiscal challenges in the near term. Medicare is only six years from insolvency,  and Social Security insolvency is only 12 years away. Yet policymakers have put  forth no plan to put either program on strong fiscal footing,” said MacGuineas.
 In a report released in May, the  Congressional Budget Office (CBO) warned that high and rising debt would have  significant negative consequences, both for the economy and for the federal  budget.
 As interest rates rise, federal  spending on interest payments, including payments to foreign holders of US  debt, would increase substantially, the report noted.
 That debt path would also push up  borrowing costs for the private sector, which would result in lower business  investment and slow the growth of economic output over time, said the report.
 The CBO also noted that the  likelihood of a fiscal crisis in the United States would increase.  “Specifically, the risk would rise of investors’ losing confidence in the US  government’s ability to service and repay its debt, causing interest rates to  increase abruptly and inflation to spiral upward, or other disruptions,” it  said.
 (Latest Update October 6, 2022)
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