For years, warnings about government deficits and borrowing sounded abstract. It was an afterthought – something for TV pundits and bond traders. Now the numbers are big enough, and the interest bills high enough, that the issue is starting to look like a core economic story.
Larger Than Medicare
With rising debt, the cost of servicing is accelerating beyond even the largest individual government spending.
America’s $38 trillion national debt is so big that the nearly $1 trillion interest payment will be larger than Medicare soon, Fortune noted last month.
That’s a remarkable shift. Not long ago, interest was a relatively minor line item. In fiscal 2019, net interest was about $375 billion. By fiscal 2025, it had jumped to roughly $952 billion, and projections suggest it will keep rising as both the debt stock and average borrowing costs increase.
The underlying problem isn’t just rates—it’s deficits. The U.S. is running annual shortfalls approaching $2 trillion, meaning it must constantly issue new debt while rolling over old obligations. That structural “primary deficit,” as economists call it, is the main driver of higher interest costs. As the debt pile grows, even modest rate increases translate into enormous additional payments.
The refinancing calendar is part of what’s driving concern. Nearly one-third of all publicly held obligations – around $9 trillion will mature over the next 12 months.
That sounds dramatic, but headlines that panic miss context. A large portion of that is short-term Treasury bills, which are routinely rolled over each year. It’s not a one-time cliff; it’s a recurring feature of how the government funds itself.
Still, the rate environment matters. Much of the debt issued in the early 2020s carried ultra-low yields. Even refinancing at 3.5% to 4% instead of near-zero rates adds tens of billions in annual interest. And with net interest already on pace to exceed $1 trillion annually, small changes in borrowing costs now move the fiscal needle.
Dependance On Foreign Demand
Another concern is who’s buying the debt. According to Bravos Research, the U.S. is highly dependent on foreign capital. Foreign investors hold far more U.S. assets than Americans hold abroad, leaving what it calls a structural funding gap. In its words, this dynamic has “made the U.S. more dependent on foreign capital than ever before.”
That dependence is becoming more visible as traditional buyers adjust their positions. According to Bloomberg, China, once a huge holder of Treasuries, has slowly cut its holdings roughly in half since 2013.
This change reflects geopolitical tensions and Beijing’s effort to diversify its reserves. While markets have so far absorbed the change, the U.S. can’t assume foreign demand will always expand in step with its borrowing.
Even Japan, the largest single foreign holder, may not be as reliable as it once seemed. Japan itself carries one of the highest debt-to-GDP ratios in the developed world, and rising domestic yields are starting to pull capital back home.
Thus, the U.S. is entering a period in which borrowing needs are rising even as some of the biggest external lenders either step back or face constraints of their own.
It doesn’t necessarily mean an immediate crisis. But it sends a message that the margin for error in the most important market is getting thinner.
Image: Shutterstock
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