Fortune | FORTUNE 10月23日 04:28
美国财政赤字加速增长,引发对未来经济的担忧
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美国财政赤字正以前所未有的速度增长,已突破37万亿美元大关,且增长速度是2000年以来的两倍。这主要归因于赤字支出、不断上升的利息成本以及政府关门带来的经济拖累。目前,国家债务的利息支付已达每年约1万亿美元,成为联邦预算中增长最快的部分。政府关门更是加剧了财政负担,每次关门都会增加数亿美元的额外开支,并延缓经济活动。长此以往,不断膨胀的国债不仅会挤压公共和私人投资,还可能推高通胀和利率,影响经济增长,并对美国在全球经济中的地位产生深远影响。

📈 **财政赤字加速增长,债务规模已超37万亿美元**:美国财政赤字正以惊人的速度扩张,已突破37万亿美元,且增长速度是21世纪初以来的两倍。CEO Michael A. Peterson指出,这表明立法者未能履行基本的财政职责。加速增长的原因包括持续的赤字支出、不断攀升的债务利息成本,以及政府部门停摆带来的经济阻碍。

💰 **利息支付飙升,挤压未来投资**:国家债务的利息支付已成为联邦预算中增长最快的部分,目前每年约达1万亿美元。在过去十年中,政府已在利息上花费4万亿美元,预计未来十年将飙升至14万亿美元。Peterson强调,这笔巨额支出“挤占了对我们未来重要的公共和私人投资”。

🏛️ **政府关门加剧财政负担,推高短期与长期成本**:为期数周的政府部分关门显著加剧了本已严峻的财政挑战。历史数据显示,政府关门会产生数亿美元的额外开支,并导致经济活动延误和预算改革推迟。财政决策的延迟不仅增加了短期成本,更会放大长期成本,使财政路径变得“不可持续”。

📉 **高企国债威胁经济稳定,影响全球地位**:不断膨胀的联邦债务正对通货膨胀和利率构成上行压力,可能限制经济增长,并提高家庭和企业的借贷成本。此外,国家债务的上升轨迹可能导致长期的就业和收入损失。尽管总统的关税政策带来部分收入,但美国已不再是三大评级机构的最高评级国家,这进一步增加了借贷成本,并引发了对美元作为世界储备货币长期地位的担忧。

Michael A. Peterson, CEO of the nonpartisan watchdog dedicated to fiscal sustainability, said this landmark is “the latest troubling sign that lawmakers are not meeting their basic fiscal duties.” In a statement provided to Fortune, Peterson said that “if it seems like we are adding debt faster than ever, that’s because we are. We passed $37 trillion just two months ago, and the pace we’re on is twice as fast as the rate of growth since 2000.” The foundation’s analysis attributes the acceleration to a combination of deficit spending, rising interest costs, and the economic drag of the ongoing government shutdown.

Peterson emphasized that the costs of carrying this debt are mounting rapidly. Interest payments on the national debt now total roughly $1 trillion per year, the fastest-growing category in the federal budget. Over the last decade, the government spent $4 trillion on interest, and Peterson calculated that it will balloon to $14 trillion over the next 10 years. He said that money “crowds out important public and private investments in our future.”

Shutdown exacerbates fiscal burden

The partial government shutdown, now entering its third week, is compounding those challenges. Shutdowns have historically been costly, adding $4 billion to federal expenses during the 2018–2019 closure and $2 billion in 2013, according to federal estimates. Each day of stalled government operations contributes to higher short-term costs, delayed economic activity, and postponed budgetary reforms—effectively worsening the debt problem they often stem from.

Delays in fiscal decision-making also magnify long-term costs, as Treasury reports have repeatedly warned. For instance, the Treasury’s Bureau of Fiscal Service Financial Report for fiscal year 2024 included a description of an “unsustainable fiscal path” and an indication that “current policy is not sustainable.” Deficit reduction has lagged significantly behind the pace seen after previous economic crises, including the Great Recession, when Congress implemented stricter spending caps and fiscal reforms within a few years of recovery.

Debt ripples

Paying off just the interest on this debt threatens to ripple through the economy. A recent Yale Budget Lab report highlighted how ballooning federal debt exerts upward pressure on both inflation and interest rates, potentially constraining growth and lifting borrowing costs for households and businesses alike. Meanwhile, an analysis conducted by EY this year found that the national debt’s rising trajectory could lead to sustained job and income losses over time.

A complicating factor, somewhat, is the “significant” revenue being generated by President Donald Trump’s tariff regime, several analysts have noted. Apollo Global Management Chief Economist Torsten Slok said the $350 billion being generated each year was “very significant” in September. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) found that the tariffs, as constructed in August, before an appeals court ruled many of them to be illegal, could cut deficits by $4 billion over the next decade. The ratings agency S&P Global reaffirmed the U.S. credit rating shortly before the appeals court ruled, saying that “broad revenue buoyancy, including robust tariff income, will offset any fiscal slippage from tax cuts and spending increases.”

Still, the U.S. credit rating is no longer top-rated at any of the three major ratings agencies, which have cited both unsustainable fiscal trends and recurring political gridlock. These downgrades have had immediate consequences, placing further upward pressure on borrowing costs and raising questions about the long-term global standing of the U.S. dollar as the world’s reserve currency. Relatedly, gold has been on a historic tear for much of 2025, before slumping to its worst sell-off earlier this week. Gold is still trading above the $4,000-per-ounce mark, a more than 50% increase year-to-date.

“Adding trillion after trillion to the debt and budgeting-by-crisis is no way for a great nation like America to run its finances,” Peterson said. “Lawmakers should take advantage of the many responsible reforms available that would put our nation on a stronger path for the future.”

The Treasury Department did not respond to a request for comment.

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美国财政 国债 财政赤字 政府关门 经济担忧 US Fiscal Policy National Debt Fiscal Deficit Government Shutdown Economic Concerns
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