Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Can the Swift effect be bottled?

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If only Taylor Swift were dating the national debt. On Sunday, the world’s attention turned to Las Vegas, as the region hosted its first Super Bowl. Despite some national naysayers, it was an unbridled success. Las Vegas accommodat­ed and entertaine­d fans and celebritie­s alike. About the only thing that disappoint­ed was the low-scoring start to the game.

Once again, Las Vegas showed it is the entertainm­ent capital of the world.

But entertainm­ent doesn’t last forever. Football fans enjoyed the game and left to return to their normal lives. The Kansas City Chiefs celebrated their victory, but the off-season is already here. Las Vegas officials handed off Super Bowl hosting duties to New Orleans.

This is a normal rhythm of life. Along with fun, there are responsibi­lities and hard decisions. One of the marks of adulthood is balancing those competing interests. The American public isn’t showing this maturity. Tens of millions of people know the latest details of Swift — prominentl­y featured on Sunday’s TV broadcast — and her boyfriend, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce. But they have little interest discussing something much more important to all Americans — the national debt.

Last week, the Congressio­nal Budget

Office released its forecast of America’s fiscal future. The situation is bleak. This fiscal year, the deficit is projected to hit $1.6 trillion. For context, the total U.S. budget didn’t even reach that number until the late 1990s.

Debt held by the public will soon hit 100% of gross domestic product. At this pace, it will reach 116% of GDP in 2034, “the highest level ever recorded.” Even the massive financial strains of World War II didn’t put the country on such poor fiscal footing.

The deficit isn’t growing because taxes are too low. Federal government revenues are currently at 17.5% of GDP. After a oneyear dip, that’s expected to rise to around 17.9%.

America is bleeding red ink because its political class is addicted to spending other people’s money. “After 2028, growth in spending on programs for elderly people and rising net interest costs drive up outlays, which reach 24.1% of GDP by 2034,” the report notes.

That gap, which is more than 6% of GDP, is a major problem. It should be at the top of the public’s mind, pressuring our elected leaders to propose and vigorously debate various solutions.

Instead, too many apathetic Americans ignore it. Perhaps someone should pay Swift to wear a pin with the national debt clock on it.

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