Finance & economics | To the hilt

How Trump, Starmer and Macron can avoid a debt crunch

With deficits soaring, their finance ministers will have to be smart

Illustration of a large anvil falling down on a government building.
Illustration: Alberto Miranda

America’s gross national debt is $36trn, or $107,000 per person. It is rising fast and will probably soon be rising even faster. If Donald Trump’s election campaign was anything to go by, his return to the White House heralds a flurry of tax cuts on everything from corporate profits to tips. In the fiscal year that ended in September, Uncle Sam spent $1.8trn more than he collected in taxes (6.4% of GDP, or over double the annual earnings of America’s seven biggest firms). By one estimate, Mr Trump’s agenda could raise borrowing by $4.1trn in the coming decade.

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Donald Trump in Brownsville, Texas on November 19th 2024

Trump wastes no time in reigniting trade wars

Canada and Mexico look likely to suffer

Scott Bessent speaks at the National Conservative Conference in Washington, DC.

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The president-elect’s nominee for treasury secretary faces a gruelling job


US flag with computer chips instead of charts

What Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders get wrong about credit cards

Forget interest rates. Rewards are the real problem


Computers unleashed economic growth. Will artificial intelligence?

Two years after ChatGPT-3.5 arrived, progress has been slower than expected

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No, but it is getting a lot harder to keep the faith

Is China really a nation of slackers?

A new survey raises the question