"Here are a couple of charts from Tim Wallace regarding interest on the national debt. The first chart shows the interest rate is falling as debt skyrockets.
Interest Rates vs. National Debt
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjCWN4Pkiue2SumWd5232wSwla_Z6OQr0idsjIdz-qEhWo6FKtgMNEDlCF5SjtA7-kRIlPy61OzFrO0RKhiIjKPAbV2nkGfCUb8Hzg-Vb49SKIXN2lcmFN_0qAExplRI4SRnDbqITor24tW/s400/Wallace+Interest+Rates+on+National+Debt+2012-08-23A.png)
click on any chart for sharper image
Key Questions
- How long can the trend last?
- How low will the rate go?
I do not know the answers to those questions, nor does anyone else. However, a rise in interest rates would cause a shocking increase in interest on the national debt.
Interest on National Debt at Current Rate vs. Historical Average
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgfx7qBvPkRlUZBwEPVW02CPmbcbAEURZTXFsojcTOLoSFVmm4xHVHD9bVSj9fpSZFYTLV-nZ0_WepKOuoGMYEIUGJA0InwpUnzzwHU18AZCjFJJQ5fm0HALWlwH8pJTEb0mQOtjO_j8etA/s400/Wallace+Interest+Rates+on+National+Debt+2012-08-23B.png)
Should interest rates rise to the long-term average, interest on the national debt would more than double from the 2011 figure of $454 billion dollars.
Here is a chart from the National Debt Clock site.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhfrG3J-xnkZz7mOWKGbibhKd8f37ox353JrXBo10C5_Ax4OJe9jZPTYnX826l2MXXp9oiYydpZ_eKbRGVOVsfEa9cL9RFY8aKOCnUXnfhUljJmiwY9Hgz-8d79fjLcrt8CQ5v8SLSal0hG/s400/Wallace+Interest+Rates+on+National+Debt+2012-08-23C.png)
The site notes "Maturity of U.S. debt ranges from less than a year to over 20 years, with the average maturity about 3 years. More than half of the debt, however, is short term, maturing in less than a year."
That is an interesting assertion short-term debt is at .09%, 10-year notes yield 1.67%, and the 30-year bond yields a mere 2.79%.
However, interest is on outstanding securities. A bond with a 6% yield maintains that yield until maturity. The average yield in Wallace's charts paid comes from Treasury Direct.
Currency Crisis Coming
If you get the idea a crisis of some sort is coming, fueled by out-of-control deficit spending as well as the Fed's ridiculous "Operation Twist Policy", then you get the right idea.
The Fed ought to be selling long-term bonds at these rates, locking in financing at attractive rates, not buying those bonds hoping to drive yields still lower.
Of course, that latter statement assumes there should be a Fed or deficit spending in the first place, neither of which I believe."
at http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2012/08/trends-in-interest-rates-on-national.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MishsGlobalEconomicTrendAnalysis+%28Mish%27s+Global+Economic+Trend+Analysis%29#0AHaMiQtixB4fiJs.99
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