[quote name='Promit Roy' timestamp='1303086610' post='4799671']
Assuming paying off the debt is even a reasonable thing to do. It isn't. Don't try to 'compress' macroeconomics to every day sizes, by the way. It is dramatically misleading.
Huh? Family or no, I would think not having $14 trillion in debt is a good thing. I know that our current economic system is based on "having debt", but not that much debt. What did i miss here?
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The debt is simply another way to look at a large amount of wealth in private hands. For the US government to pay off its debt, it has to destroy wealth in private hands. You may want to do that, but then it's important how you go about it, and in which way the economic pressures flow. Basically, if your goal is to reduce the US government debt, this will most likely fail, because the method by which this is attempted is typically to make the economically bottom 95% bleed, whereas the relevant part of the wealth is really in the top 5%. If, on the other hand, your goal is to destroy the wealth of the top 5% and you go about this in an effective way (via property taxes etc.), then you may well be successful in reducing the government debt. But you do have to keep in mind that the debt does not only correspond to the wealth of the super-rich; it also corresponds to retirement funds, so one precondition to getting rid of the government debt is to eliminate those funds at implement a radically different retirement system, etc.