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U.S. national debt soars past $37 trillion — now bigger than the economy; is Trump's record tariff windfall enough as deficit hits historic highs? Key numbers inside

U.S. national debt soars past $37 trillion — now bigger than the economy; is Trump's record tariff windfall enough as deficit hits historic highs? Key numbers inside

Time of India2 days ago
U.S. debt hits $37 trillion as President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs pump billions into federal coffers, yet the nation's deficit keeps growing. Treasury figures confirm America is adding roughly $1 trillion to its debt every five months — a pace unseen in modern history. In July alone, tariffs brought in a record $21 billion, but rising interest payments and entitlement costs still pushed the monthly deficit to $291 billion.
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The $37 trillion milestone arrived years early
Trump's tariffs deliver record customs revenue
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Deficit still up nearly 20% in July
Debt now bigger than the U.S. economy
Who actually owns America's debt?
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Interest costs now bigger than defense spending
Tariffs bring in record cash — but is it enough?
Will tariffs really shrink the deficit?
What this means for Americans
The political and economic crossroads
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The United States has just crossed a fiscal threshold many economists once thought was years away. As of August 12, 2025, Treasury data shows the gross national debt has reached— an all-time record and more than double the country's total economic output. What makes this moment more complex is that it comes during a period when federal revenues, especially from tariffs, are soaring under President Donald Trump's aggressive trade policies. Yet the deficit is still widening.This debt figure wasn't supposed to appear until after 2030, according to earlier Congressional Budget Office projections. Instead, a mix of pandemic-era borrowing, expanded social spending, and tax changes has pushed the timeline forward by at least five years.The pace is startling: the U.S. is adding about, twice the average rate of the past quarter-century. For comparison, it took the countryto accumulate its first $1 trillion in debt, a milestone reached in 1981.Economist Wendy Edelberg, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, warns that 'this kind of debt growth is not sustainable without crowding out investment and pushing borrowing costs higher.' The government's interest payments are already consuming more than, surpassing even national defense spending.Against this backdrop, Trump's latest tariff package — which imposes steep duties on a broad range of imports, from Chinese electronics to European luxury goods — has delivered a short-term revenue spike. Treasury figures show, bringing in roughlyfor the month.For trade hawks in the administration, this is proof that tariffs can be a 'revenue weapon' as well as a geopolitical lever. A senior White House economic adviser, speaking on background, said importers had accelerated shipments to beat upcoming tariff hikes, temporarily inflating revenue.Even with this windfall, the U.S. ran a— up nearly 20% from the same month last year. Over the first ten months of fiscal 2025, the deficit has totaled, a 7% rise from the same period in 2024.The reason is simple: spending growth is outpacing income. Social Security obligations, Medicare costs, and higher interest payments on the existing debt have more than offset tariff revenue gains. 'It's like getting a raise but increasing your lifestyle spending even faster,' one Treasury official remarked.Even before Congress approved President Donald Trump's sweeping tax and domestic spending package, the federal government was already barreling toward one of the largest deficits in modern history. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) had projected that Washington would spendthis fiscal year — a shortfall now set to deepen sharply.With Trump's so-calledsigned into law, the CBO warns the legislation will add nearlyover the next decade. The measure also raised the federal debt ceiling by $5 trillion to $41.1 trillion, but even that lifeline may prove short-lived. The CBO forecasts the nation's debt will smash throughAs of, already surpassing the size of America's entire $30.3 trillion economy. The debt-to-GDP ratio — a measure economists use to gauge fiscal health — has climbed to, up from pre-pandemic levels near 80% and not far from the 2020 record of 132.8%.Debt growth has surged during three major periods: the Reagan-Bush deficits of the 1980s and early 1990s, the Great Recession of 2008–09, and the COVID-19 pandemic. The current wave is being driven byPrivate investors hold the largest share — about— while federal trust funds like Social Security and Medicare hold another. The Federal Reserve ownsin Treasuries.Foreign ownership remains substantial, with, followed by theand. Mutual funds, pension funds, banks, and state governments also hold significant chunks.The fastest-growing line item in the federal budget isn't Medicare or the Pentagon — it's. In fiscal 2024, the U.S. paidin net interest, surpassing bothandThat burden is rising fast as the Federal Reserve's higher interest rates push up borrowing costs. The average rate on federal debt has more than doubled since January 2022, jumping fromas of July 2025.Trump'shave pumped billions into federal coffers, including, yet the deficit continues to balloon. Treasury data shows the U.S. is adding about— a pace unseen in modern fiscal history.The Congressional Budget Office estimates Trump's tariffs could reduce deficits by— but that projection assumes steady import flows and no major trade retaliation. Many economists are skeptical.Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for International Economics points out that tariffs also act as a tax on consumers and businesses, potentially slowing economic growth and dampening other tax receipts. 'You might get a sugar high in revenue,' he said, 'but the long-term diet is less healthy.'For most households, the impact of Washington's fiscal numbers feels abstract — until it isn't. Higher debt can influence mortgage rates, credit card interest, and the stability of the U.S. dollar. Tariffs, meanwhile, can push up the price of everything from smartphones to home appliances.In essence, Americans are facing a two-sided squeeze: fiscal policies that raise costs in the short term (tariffs) and debt growth that could raise borrowing costs in the long term.Heading into the 2026 midterms, fiscal policy is shaping up as a defining battleground. Trump is betting that voters will see tariffs as a tool of economic nationalism and revenue recovery. Democrats argue the policy is a hidden tax and that runaway deficits risk undermining the economy's resilience.With debt climbing and deficits persisting despite record tariff revenues, the U.S. is entering uncharted territory — one where fiscal discipline and political will may soon be tested in ways not seen for decades.Because heavy borrowing, pandemic spending, and rising interest costs accelerated debt growth years ahead of forecasts.Not yet — tariff revenue is rising, but overall spending still far outpaces income.
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