Inflating Us Debt Metrics Will Not Affect The Dollar Expert Opines

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 01:04

Inflating Us Debt Metrics Will Not Affect The Dollar Expert Opines

Tax Analysts

Inflating US Debt Metrics Will Not Affect the Dollar, Expert Opines

Tax Analysts’ chief economist Martin Sullivan provides an overview of the state of the economy and how the recent debt limit bill could affect it.

Expert Views: Inflation, Interest and the National Debt - The Peter

The government

The government's soaring debt balance poses problems for the US economy. Those include higher inflation, greater market volatility, and a lower quality of life for

US Debt: Why Economists Are so Worried About Huge Buildup

Great Dilution: The Global Impact of the US Inflation Shock on

High interest rates and bond

U.S. Economic Update: Inflation, The Deficit, And The Debt Limit

High interest rates and bond yields are increasing the amount Washington must pay to service the federal debt, which neither economic growth nor inflation look like

Will the US inflate away its public debt?

America faces an array of

The Inflationary Risks of Rising Federal Deficits and Debt

America faces an array of complex fiscal and economic challenges, including high inflation, rising interest costs, unsustainable debt and recession fears. We asked experts with diverse views

Higher debt adds to the risk of inflationary pressure in both the short- and the long-run, through aggregate demand, inflation expectations, crowding-out of private investment, and worries

A leading financial expert suggests

A leading financial expert suggests how the rising US debt metrics will not thwart the progress of the US dollar.

Dollar demand to dampen US debt fears

The US Treasury, the largest issuer of dollar-denominated liabilities, gained 6% of GDP from the inflation surprise of 20 (a third of which was paid by foreign

The US just lost its

The US just lost its final AAA credit rating as debt nears $37 trillion. Yields are rising, deficits widening, and markets are starting to notice. Here's what the shift means for

Why the growing US debt crisis is too big to ignore now