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US Debt Default Clock Hits Two Minutes to Midnight

Sixty-six cents of every dollar the federal government borrows now vanishes into interest payments on past debt, a shift that has forced the Debt Default Clock to two minutes to midnight. This marks the closest the nation has stood to a fiscal crisis since the committee began tracking the gauge.

US Debt Default Clock Hits Two Minutes to Midnight

The Debt Default Clock serves as a warning system for the point where the government faces an unavoidable failure to meet its financial obligations. As interest costs climb, they have surged past defense spending and now stand behind only Social Security and Medicare as the largest line items in the federal budget. Chairman Baker Spring argues that the federal government is no longer financing the future, but rather exhausting its resources to settle the debts of the past.

The committee evaluates the nation’s fiscal health using twelve specific benchmarks, including spending levels, debt accumulation, and economic growth rates. A fiscal crisis is defined as failing at least ten of these twelve tests. Currently, the government is failing eight, with the committee projecting that rising interest costs will soon undermine one of the remaining safeguards. While the committee maintains that a reversal is possible through spending restraint and accelerated economic growth, the current trajectory points toward a deepening crisis.

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