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US federal debt becoming ‘alarmingly unsustainable’ as Iran war fuels spending: analysts

Washington’s rapid accumulation of sovereign debt sparks outcry, with some analysts questioning if Trump has the political will to cut the deficit

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US sovereign debt has soared in recent years, with analysts warning that the Iran war could fuel even greater borrowing. Photo: AP
Frank Chenin Shanghai

The United States’ rapidly mounting sovereign debt pile – which reached an unprecedented US$39 trillion on Wednesday – is becoming “alarmingly unsustainable” and a potential threat to the global economy, with spending likely to spiral even further amid the Iran war, analysts said.

It remains unclear whether US President Donald Trump has the political will to rein in borrowing, despite promising to eliminate the national debt while campaigning for office in 2016, and other countries including China taking concrete steps to reduce government leverage, observers said.

There is also a risk that a more heavily indebted US government could “abuse its global status”, causing a spillover into a global economy already feeling the impact of the Middle East oil shock, they added.
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Bala Ramasamy, an economics professor at the China Europe International Business School, said the cost of the “alarmingly unsustainable” federal debt build-up would ultimately fall on the American people rather than Trump himself.

“At the end of the day, Trump is not going to pay,” he said. “[He’ll] kick the can to the next administration in less than three years, and the next president may probably do the same, knowing the world will just lend to the US.”

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“This is an act making full use of – or abusing – America’s superpower status,” he added.

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