The debt limit reporting in the media is fairly good on the political aspects of the issue, but less good on other relevant aspects.
One issue has to do with the size of the debt. The debt limit is
$31.4 trillion and the debt subject to that limit is bumping up against
that number. However, reporting I have seen fails to mention that of that $31.4
trillion, about $6.9 trillion is held by intragovernmental accounts, including the
Social Security trust funds. The Treasury consequently reports that about $24.
6 trillion is held by “the public.”
However, included in “the public” is the Federal Reserve
System. Federal
Reserve outright holdings of Treasury securities currently stand at about $5.5
trillion. (The system also reports owning $2.6 trillion of mortgage-backed securities,
which they state are “fully collateralized” by Treasury securities.)
Subtracting the $5.5 trillion from $24.6 trillion leaves
about $19.1 trillion of “privately-held” debt of the type subject to the limit.
This includes foreign holdings, including foreign governments and central
banks.
While the Federal Reserve Banks are technically private
corporations owned by the member banks, for most analytical purposes they
should be considered part of the government. The Fed remits “excess earnings”
to the Treasury. Its major expenses are for its operations, interest paid on
bank reserves, and interest paid in connection with its open market operations.
A major source of income is interest received on Treasury and other securities.
(For more on this, see this
Fed press release.)
While $19.1 trillion is still a large number, the current
reporting misses that close to 40 percent of
the debt subject to limit is debt that the government essentially owes
itself or to the Federal Reserve.
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