Mar 042011
 

by Greg Bocquet Monday, February 28, 2011

Regardless of how much closer Obama’s budget brings our economy into a balance of payments not seen since 2001, we will continue to run deficits for the next decade, and the national debt will keep growing every year that happens.

While most of the country’s $14 trillion debt is held by private banks in the U.S., the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Board estimate that, as of December, about $4.4 trillion of it was held by foreign governments that purchase our treasury securities much as an investor buys shares in a company and comes to own his or her little chunk of the organization.

Looking at the list of our top international creditors, a few overall characteristics show some interesting trends: Three of the top 10 spots are held by China and its constituent parts, and while two of our biggest creditors are fellow English-speaking democracies, a considerable share of our debt is held by oil exporters that tend to be decidedly less friendly in other areas of international relations.

Here we break down the top 10 foreign holders of U.S. debt, comparing each creditor’s holdings with the equivalent chunk of the United States they “own,” represented by the latest (2009) state gross domestic product data released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Obviously, these creditors won’t actually take states from us as payment on our debts, but it’s fun to imagine what states and national monuments they could assert a claim to.


1. Mainland China

Amount of U.S. debt: $891.6 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 20.4%

Building on the holdings of its associated territories, China is the undisputed largest holder of U.S. foreign debt in the world. Accounting for 20.4% of the total, mainland China’s $891.6 billion in U.S. treasury securities is almost equal to the combined 2009 GDP of Illinois ($630.4 billion) and Indiana ($262.6 billion) in 2009, a shade higher at a combined $893 billion. As President Obama — who is from Chicago — wrangles over his proposed budget with Congress he may be wise to remember that his home city may be at stake in the deal.

 

2. Japan

Amount of U.S. debt: $883.6 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 20.2%

The runner-up on the list of our most significant international creditors goes to Japan, which accounts for over a fifth of our foreign debt holdings with $883.6 billion in U.S. treasury securities. That astronomical number is just shy of the combined GDP of a significant chunk of the lower 48: Minnesota ($260.7 billion), Wisconsin ($244.4 billion), Iowa ($142.3 billion) and Missouri ($239.8 billion) produced a combined output of $887.2 billion in 2009.

 

3. United Kingdom

Amount of U.S. debt: $541.3 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 12.4%

At number three on the list is perhaps our closest ally on the world stage, the United Kingdom (which includes the British provinces of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, as well as the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man). The U.K. holds $541.3 billion in U.S. foreign debt, which is 12.4% of our total external debt. That amount is equivalent to the combined GDP of two East Coast manufacturing hubs, Delaware ($60.6 billion) and New Jersey ($483 billion) — which was named, yes, after the island of Jersey in the English Channel. The two states’ combined output in 2009 came to $543.6 billion.

 

4. Oil Exporters

Amount of U.S. debt: $218 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 5%

Another grouped entry, the oil exporters form another international bloc with money to burn. The group includes 15 countries as diverse as the regions they represent: Ecuador, Venezuela, Indonesia, Bahrain, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Gabon, Libya, and Nigeria. As a group they hold 5% of all American foreign debt, with a combined $218 billion of U.S. treasury securities in their own treasuries. That’s roughly equivalent to the combined 2009 GDP of Nebraska ($86.4 billion) and Kansas ($124.9 billion), which seems to be an equal trade: The two states produce a bunch of grain for export, which many of the arid oil producers tend to trade for oil.

 

5. Brazil

Amount of U.S. debt: $180.8 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 4.1%

Rounding out the top five is the largest economy in South America, Brazil. The country known for its beaches, Carnaval and the unbridled hedonism that goes along with both has made a big investment in the U.S., buying up $180.8 billion in American debt up to December. That’s almost equal to the $180.5 billion combined GDP of Idaho ($54 billion) and Nevada ($126.5 billion), a state that is no stranger to hedonism itself.

 

6. Caribbean Banking Centers

Amount of U.S. debt: $155.6 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 3.6%

You have to have cash on hand to buy up U.S. government debt, and offshore banking has given six countries the combined capital needed to make the Caribbean Banking Centers our sixth-largest foreign creditor. The Treasury Department counts the Bahamas, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, the Netherlands Antilles, Panama and the British Virgin Islands in this designation, which as a group holds $155.6 billion in U.S. treasury securities. That’s equivalent to the GDP of landlocked Kentucky ($156.6 billion), whose residents may not actually mind if they were ever to become an extension of some Caribbean island paradise.


7. Hong Kong

Amount of U.S. debt: $138.2 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 3.2%

At No. 7 on the list of our foreign creditors is Hong Kong, a formerly British part of China that maintains a separate government and economic ties than the communist mainland. With $138.2 billion in U.S. treasury securities, the capitalist enclave could lay claim to Yellowstone Park and our nation’s capital: The combined GDP of Wyoming ($37.5 billion) and Washington D.C. ($99.1 billion) totaled $136.6 billion in 2009.

 

8. Canada

Amount of U.S. debt: $134.6 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 3.1%

They say that a friend in need is a friend indeed, and our neighbor to the north has proven to be a kind and generous creditor in our time of financial need. Canada holds about 3.1% of our foreign debt, or $134.6 billion. If friend were to become enemy and Canada were looking to annex some U.S. land to cover the debt though, the country would have an easy time of it. The combined GDP of Maine ($51.3 billion), New Hampshire ($59.4 billion) and Vermont ($25.4 billion) comes close to Canada’s debt holdings at $136.1 billion.

Residents of the three states in our extreme northeast corner should start practicing their French: They might become Québécois one of these days.

 

9. Taiwan

Amount of U.S. debt: $131.9 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 3.0%

Taiwan, an island barely 100 miles off the coast of China, is claimed by the People’s Republic of China, despite having its own government and economic relations with the outside world. Part of those economic relations includes the island’s holding of $131.9 billion of U.S. debt, roughly equivalent to the combined GDP of West Virginia ($63.3 billion) and Hawaii ($66.4 billion), which totals $129.7 billion.

Unless we get our spending in check, we risk losing some of our most visually stunning territory (West Virginia, obviously) to our friendly neighbors on the other side of the Pacific Ocean.

 

10. Russia

Amount of U.S. debt: $106.2 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 2.4%

Starting off the list of our major foreign creditors is Russia, which holds about 2.4% of the U.S. debt pie that sits on the international dinner table. Its $106.2 billion in treasury securities is equivalent to the 2009 GDP of our sparsely populated North: The combined output of North Dakota ($31.9 billion), South Dakota ($38.3 billion) and Montana ($36 billion) matches up nicely with the Russian holdings, at $106.2 billion…….story

 

Jan 252011
 

I’ve decided to run for president. My first official act will

be to nationalize Walmart. I won’t change a thing except

they will be mandated to buy at least 51% of all their

products from American manufacturers.

 

End of unemployment.

End of China’s political strength.

China’s military build-up and space-race are immediately de-funded.

 

Any questions? Oh, I can’t do that? If the government can take over

GM, the banking industry, the entire health care system,and

our educational system and we get nothing in return

for this, then I don’t think anyone will complain about the

Walmart takeover in light of the consequences.

 

My second act will be to take 10% of the return on the Walmart

“investment” (estimated to be 10 trillion dollars over 30 years)

and start the American Shale, Gas, Coal, Oil and Nuclear

Investment Act and defund Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran and Russia.

 

Between the  Walmart Act and the Energy Act, there won’t be

enough people to fill these jobs, so ALL the Mexicans can stay.

Of course, 

with citizenship, they will have to pay taxes and get used to the

decrease in benefits, but… what the hell, they will

be Americans.

 

With cheap energy and no unemployment the auto and housing

industries will boom, completely revitalizing all the ansillary

manufacturing necessary to sustain them. By this time we will

be in a negative equity of available workers and HAVE to export

some of the jobs BACK out, but at least it will be on our terms

this time.

 

Of course, our educational system will have to be ramped up

to accomodate a more productive workforce, so we will be

discontinuing social studies, humanities, gender equivalency,

climate change indoctrination, and all American Imperialism

Awareness classes.

 

My final act will be to establish a new holiday. It will be called

the Walmart Economy In Reverse Day, or  WEIRD for short.

Every one will celebrate the day that Walmart starting doing

for America what it WAS doing for China.

 

Good night and God Bless us all.

 

Not until the Republican controlled Congress, in all their fiscal responsibility, stops the Government from wasting our tax dollars. As I write, The Republican controlled Congress is FORCING NASA to pay contractors 215 Million dollars in 2011 for a Rocket program that WAS SCRAPPED last year. 215 MILLION DOLLARS people, for parts that will NEVER BE USED. Sitting for decades collecting dust, just so some contractor can buy a new yacht (probably a contributor). Yes, very fiscally responsible all-right. It’s all over the news today, for anyone who wants to check it out. Cut vital services to millions of needy Americans, but don’t you dare take money from Corporate America. Fiscally responsible??? More like fiscally reprehensible. More Kool-aid all around. And as for a country of debt carriers in stead of aircraft carriers… Clinton borrowing money from China??? That one slipped by me. Obama borrowing from Saudi Arabia??? That one slipped by me too. Dubya??? That’s right… he’s the guy who took a 4 Billion dollar surplus and turned it into a 10 Trillion dollar deficit… by manufacturing a war and borrowing from China and Saudi Arabia, but I guess that slipped by all the neo-cons. Obama isn’t blaming Bush… THE COUNTRY is blaming Bush… QED

 

 

That I do not know but I can say this Obama is trying but he’s met with resistment from all angles. Everyone is saying he’s not doing a good job but remember he didn’t make this mess. so he needs more time and help. no one is complaining about all the bull gthe Bush administation caused. he’s the reason we’re in these wars. there was no weapons of mass destruction just greedy ole republicans and the USA being a bully. The real problem is North Korea and you see Bush didn’t mess with them because of China so quit putting everything on Obama and think about how we got in this mess to begin with

 

Surprise, high levels of  lead is found in toys and other items in products sold by Walmart and Target.  Could it be that the US trade agreements with China have anything to do with this problem.  I note that no mention is made regarding where the products were manufactured.  When will we learn that in order to protect us and our children, the US should resume manufacturing products in our own country where there is a better than average chance that rules will be followed!?!  It would also help the economy by providing jobs and other revenue.

Oct 132010
 

The American economy was forged by Agriculture and Manufacturing and remains the core foundation of our wealth.

The mindset by our elected officials to pass down the old economy in an effort to stimulate new growth and opportunity simply just backfired. The fact is that they gave away the store one to many times.  As long as the second line item on every business plan in existence is to outsource every possible job and greed is the accepted method of doing business here in America, don’t  expect growth. 

 

Quite honestly, General Motors is doing just fine in China and South Korea but here in America it has simply become to expensive to stay in business after the CEO and unions get done with the profits.

 

If we curb  the ridiculous CEO paychecks, the 40K wages being paid for floor sweepers, and the astronomical executive retirement benefits we will see how fast business can survive and thrive here in America.

 

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