Bessent's Treasury has troubling news for every taxpayer
Borrowing money is not a crisis by itself. Households do it for homes and cars, and governments do it to fund wars, recessions, and long stretches of ordinary spending. The trouble starts when the interest on that borrowing grows faster than everything else. For most of modern history, the United ...
Overview
Borrowing money is not a crisis by itself. Households do it for homes and cars, and governments do it to fund wars, recessions, and long stretches of ordinary spending. The trouble starts when the interest on that borrowing grows faster than everything else.
For most of modern history, the United States could carry a large debt without much strain. Interest rates sat near record lows for more than a decade, so the government refinanced old bonds cheaply and rolled the balance forward. Economists called it a manageable burden, and for years it was.
Two things changed that math. Rates climbed off their lows, and the pile of debt kept getting bigger. Every new bond the Treasury sells now carries a higher coupon than the one it replaces, and there are far more of them to sell.
That collision is now showing up in the government's books. The federal deficit reached just under $1.4 trillion in the first nine months of fiscal 2026, roughly $155 billion of fresh borrowing a month, according to the CBO.
Why the interest bill is climbing faster than the debt
Net interest is the government's bill for money it already spent. It does not buy a single road, missile, or Social Security check. It only keeps the existing debt from defaulting.
Think of a coupon as the fixed yearly rate a bond pays whoever holds it. When the Treasury sold debt during the near-zero years, those coupons were tiny. Replacing them at today's rates means paying several times as much to borrow the same dollar.
More Treasury:
- Bessent says a $1,000 seed can build generational wealth
- Nvidia's $25B bond deal sends investors a clear signal
- Bessent makes bold case for Trump Accounts to build wealth
The interest number climbs for two reasons. The debt keeps growing, and the average rate on it keeps resetting higher as old low-rate bonds mature and get replaced.
Total national debt now sits at $39.4 trillion, a balance built up under both Republican and Democratic administrations, according to the Treasury Department.
Related: Vanguard flags IRA rule with overlooked tax advantage
What the latest budget review reveals about your money
The most recent monthly budget review put hard figures on the strain. Net interest on the public debt has reached $857 billion this fiscal year, or about $23.8 billion every week, according to the CBO.
That figure is roughly $100 billion, or 13%, higher than the interest paid in the same stretch of 2025, the result of a bigger debt load and higher long-term rates, the CBO added.
Most of the federal budget can be debated, trimmed, or delayed. Interest cannot. It is a legal obligation paid before almost anything else, which is why its growth crowds out the very spending lawmakers argue about.
Here is the part that reframes the whole federal budget. According to the CBO's July budget review:
- Net interest so far in fiscal 2026 has reached $857 billion.
- That is about $20 billion more than the combined budgets of the Defense, Commerce, Homeland Security, and Education departments, plus the Environmental Protection Agency, the Small Business Administration, and pandemic-era refundable credits.
- Social Security outlays rose $62 billion, or 5%, on higher benefits and more beneficiaries.
- Medicare outlays rose $58 billion, or 8%, on higher enrollment and payment rates.
- Medicaid outlays rose $49 billion, or 10%, on rising cost per enrollee.
When I lined the interest tab up against those agency budgets, one thing stood out. The single fastest-growing line in the federal budget buys nothing new at all. It is pure carrying cost on decisions already made.
What the rising debt load means for taxpayers
You never get an invoice for interest on the national debt. You pay it anyway, through the taxes that service the debt and the programs squeezed to make room for it.
Details
I divided that $857 billion across the roughly 134 million households the Census Bureau counts. It works out to about $6,350 per household in nine months, and that covers interest alone, not a single dollar of the underlying debt.
Spread over those nine months, that is close to $700 a month per household, quietly folded into the cost of running the government.
Every dollar sent to bondholders is a dollar that cannot go to a tax cut, a defense program, or the retirement checks millions of people are counting on. As the interest line grows, the room for everything else shrinks.
This is not a red or blue problem. The debt grew under presidents from both parties, and the interest clock runs the same no matter who controls Washington.
That is the quiet cost debt hawks keep flagging. It rarely makes headlines, and it never appears on your pay stub, but it shapes every budget fight in the capital.
What to watch as borrowing keeps climbing
The pressure is set to build. Full-year borrowing could top $2 trillion, an unusual figure while the economy is growing and unemployment is low, according to the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB).
Its president, Maya MacGuineas, called the current path "likely the tip of the iceberg" and warned that Social Security and Medicare sit within seven years of trust fund exhaustion. She has pushed to shrink the deficit to about 3% of gross domestic product, roughly half its current size.
The CBO's own long-range math points the same way, projecting annual interest costs will roughly double to $2.1 trillion by 2036 and calling the trajectory unsustainable.
There are only three real levers to pull, and none is popular. Raise taxes, cut spending, or count on faster growth and lower interest rates to ease the load on their own.
Two markers are worth watching over the next year. The first is whether full-year borrowing clears $2 trillion. The second is 2032, the date the CBO now predicts for the exhaustion of Social Security's main trust fund, one year sooner than its earlier estimate.
Bessent's Treasury can keep selling bonds to willing buyers for now. The bill attached to all of them is the part that no longer waits.
Related: Bessent doubles down on Main Street over Wall Street
Source
Originally published at www.thestreet.com.
