3) So our 2010 net loss was about $1.30 trillion, right?
4) So, roughly every year, assuming 2010 is standard (and I'm not saying that it is), we go about $1.30 trillion more in debt?
Both of these are wrong - not because of the numbers involved, but because of what you seem to believe that those numbers
mean.
See, when the federal government spends $1.30 trillion more than it takes in taxes, this net spending does not magically disappear. It means that dollar for dollar, the non-government sectors had $1.30 trillion more in income than they spent.
For example, this means that there are many people who privately are now richer (that is, own more money) than they were last year. Perhaps you are one of them and if so, why would you talk about
your loss? Of course, there are also many people in the US who are in a bad situation right now because of mortgages and unemployment - clearly, there is a problem in that the riches are very unevenly distributed.
It is also true that the external sector had more income than outlays, and so overall, other countries now own more US$ than they did last year. But again, does this represent a loss for US citizens? Not necessarily: the reason that other countries now hold more US$ is that those countries have been sending ships full with useful real goods to the US, and the US as a whole has been able to enjoy these goods without working for them. I would not call that a loss, though of course you have to be aware that at some point in the future, the US may no longer be able to enjoy net imports to such a large extent as it does today.
Overall, I have to say that it is very weird to watch all this debt hysteria going around in the US and elsewhere, considering that there really is no debt crisis at all. It's all just a political trick to be able to savage the few social safety nets that still exist.
Note that there is a real economic crisis, but it is entirely unrelated. The real crisis is in the extremely high unemployment. The waste and inefficiency of letting all this productive capacity go idle and of letting skills atrophy (due to long-term unemployment) is terrible, yet somehow nobody seems to talk about it.
In any case, if you want to read more about what all this debt stuff is (or isn't) really about, economist Bill Mitchell
has commented again today on the situation in the US. For the larger picture, you may be interested in searching for Modern Monetary Theory if you are serious about wanting to understand things better.
when they throw around numbers like "$800 billion in government spending cuts by 2025!" (or whatever cut and year), are they talking about reducing the annual spending of the government by $800 billion a year (gradually more and more reductions, until in 2025 our annual savings will be $800 billion), or are they talking about the total value of the reductions from here to 2025 (gradually reduce the spending more and more, until by 2025 our total savings over the past 14 years will be $800 billion)?[/quote]
They are talking about the latter. It is a silly game that politicians play in order to be able to throw around larger numbers.
It's even more silly because doing these kinds of projections for 14 years out is totally irresponsible. First of all, those future budgets will be decided on by politicians in the future, so any changes made right now could easily be reversed a few years down the line. Second, even if the politics of it isn't going to change for 14 years, forecasts at that timescale are simply too unreliable. Think about it: in 1990, who would have predicted the explosion of the web? The dot-com boom, then bubble, then burst? Who even in 2006 has predicted the global financial crisis?
It's all smoke and mirrors, and the journalists spreading this type of nonsense should really be held accountable.