OPINION

Federal Debt Equals About $287,859 Per Income-Tax-Paying Household

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As Congress worked in recent days to increase the legal limit on the federal debt, the Treasury kept that debt artificially frozen at approximately $28.9 trillion, where it stood at the beginning of this week.

With that limit lifted, the federal debt will take a jump upward, then keep steadily climbing, constantly increasing the burden on future taxpayers.

In 2018, according to the last complete annual report on individual income tax returns published by the Internal Revenue Service, there were 100,424,240 households in the United States that filed what the IRS calls a "taxable return." "The taxable and nontaxable classification of a return for this report is determined by the presence of 'total income tax,'" explained the IRS.

"'Total income tax,'" it said, "was the sum of income tax after credits."

In other words, the 100,424,240 households that filed a "taxable return" in 2018 actually paid income taxes to the federal government.

If you divide the $28,908,004,857,445 in debt that the federal government owed before the debt limit was lifted by the 100,424,240 American households that paid net income taxes in 2018, it works out to approximately $287,859 per income-tax-paying household.

Back in 1989, the year that President Ronald Reagan left office, there were 89,178,355 income-tax-paying households in the United States, according to the IRS. At the end of January that year, the federal debt was $2,697,957,000,000.

That means the federal debt then equaled approximately $30,253 per income-tax-paying household.

Even when the January 1989 federal debt of $30,253 per income-tax-paying household is adjusted into November 2021 dollars (using the Bureau of Labor Statistics inflation calculator), it equals only approximately $69,437.

In real terms, the current federal debt of $287,859 per income-tax-paying household is more than four times that much.

How much larger will the debt burden be when your grandchildren are paying income taxes?

President Joe Biden's fiscal 2022 budget proposal called for running a cumulative deficit of $14.531 trillion over just the next 10 fiscal years. Balancing the budget -- let alone slowing the increase in the debt -- plays no part in his fiscal plan.

Adding another $14.531 trillion to the federal debt would increase the burden on the 100,424,240 income-tax-paying households of 2018 by approximately $144,696.

What could the income-tax-paying households in this nation purchase for the $287,859 in debt the federal government is already holding on their behalf?

In Iowa, according to Zillow, the average cost of a "middle price tier" home in October of this year was $174,916. In Ohio, it was $190,984. In Nebraska, it was $217,232. In Michigan, it was $218,051. In Wisconsin, it was $241,369. In Illinois, it was $243,355. In Pennsylvania, it was $245,153. In Tennessee, it was $253,263. In South Carolina, it was $247,606. And, in Georgia, it was $269,441.

Clearly, in many parts of America, the mortgage a taxpaying family would need to buy a home would be less than the amount the federal government has borrowed in their name.

Which would you rather have over your head? A roof that you will someday own? Or a federal government that is steadily increasing its control over your finances and your life?

The federal government, obviously, has not been borrowing money from mortgage providers to purchase homes.

Among those lending money to the federal government so it can continue to run its massive annual deficits are foreign governments and foreign interests. According to the Treasury Department, entities in Japan owned $1.299 trillion in U.S. government debt as of the end of September. Entities in mainland China owned $1.047 trillion. Entities in the United Kingdom owned $566.5 billion; entities in Luxembourg owned $311.8 billion; entities in Ireland owned $309.6 billion; and entities in Switzerland own $296.5 billion.

Even though the average interest rate for publicly traded U.S. government debt has been very low in recent years (1.437% in November 2021 compared with 5.395% in November 2001), the actual interest the government pays now is still significant. In fiscal 2021, according to the Monthly Treasury Statement, interest payments on Treasury securities hit $562.38 billion. That was more than three times as much as the fiscal 2021 cost of the Department of State ($35.814 billion), the Department of Justice ($39.261 billion) and the Department of Homeland Security ($91.069 billion) combined ($166.144 billion).

Will the federal government ever again balance its budget?

The obvious bet is: No.

Terence P. Jeffrey is the editor-in-chief of CNSnews.com.