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The massive volume of global debt means creditors will lose value one way or another. They will either receive "haircuts" through defaults or be repaid with money that has been devalued by government printing to cover the obligations.
Traditional recessions are obsolete because policymakers cannot allow the collapse of asset prices which serve as collateral in a highly indebted world. They will preemptively inject liquidity to prop up markets, effectively creating a 'put option' on the system paid for by steady, long-term currency debasement.
Faced with massive debt, governments have five options: austerity, default, high growth, hyperinflation, or financial repression. Napier argues repression—keeping inflation above interest rates to erode debt—is the most politically acceptable path, just as it was post-WWII.
Instead of officially defaulting on unpayable promises like Social Security, governments opt for massive inflation. This devalues the currency so severely that while citizens receive their checks, the money's purchasing power is destroyed, rendering the benefits worthless without an explicit, unpopular cut.
Investor Ray Dalio explains that national debt reaches a crisis point not because of its size, but when two things happen: debt payments squeeze out essential spending, and low demand for new debt forces central banks to print money to buy it, thus devaluing the currency.
Governments with massive debt cannot afford to keep interest rates high, as refinancing becomes prohibitively expensive. This forces central banks to lower rates and print money, even when it fuels asset bubbles. The only exits are an unprecedented productivity boom (like from AI) or a devastating economic collapse.
Unlike other countries, the U.S. can't truly become insolvent because, as the world's reserve currency, it can always print more dollars to pay its debts. The actual danger is that the government will devalue the currency through inflation, effectively stealing purchasing power from everyone.
When a government's deficit spending forces it to borrow new money simply to cover the interest on existing debt, it enters a self-perpetuating "debt death spiral." This weakens the nation's financial position until it either defaults or is forced to make brutal, unpopular cuts, risking internal turmoil.
As the world's reserve currency, the US can always print money to cover its debts and avoid a technical default. The true danger is not insolvency but the resulting hyperinflation, which devalues the dollar and silently erodes the purchasing power of everyone holding it, both domestically and globally.
Tyler Cowen predicts the US will eventually resort to several years of ~7% inflation to manage its national debt. This strategy, while damaging to living standards, is politically more palatable than raising taxes or cutting spending. Rapid, AI-driven productivity growth is the only plausible alternative to this outcome.
In an environment dominated by government debt and money printing, holding cash is not a neutral act of saving; it's direct exposure to inflation. As the government devalues the currency to manage its interest payments, the purchasing power of cash diminishes. The priority must shift from simply saving to owning productive or scarce assets as a defense.