[Salon] The $39 trillion national debt could break the all-important U.S. bond market, sparking a ‘vicious’ emergency, former Treasury secretary warns





The $39 trillion national debt could break the all-important U.S. bond market, sparking a ‘vicious’ emergency, former Treasury secretary warns

Fortune
Tristan Bove
Updated Fri, April 17, 2026 
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Former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, pictured in 2019.
 (Tiffany Hagler-Geard/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

The U.S. is caught in a spiraling debt crisis, and a major casualty might be demand for U.S. Treasuries—a critical support pillar for the economy and the government’s ability to spend money.

The scale of U.S. borrowing is severely testing confidence in the country’s ability to keep financing itself. The federal debt has climbed to $39 trillion, a level that budget experts have warned might soon force the U.S. into increasingly dire decisions as to what it can spend on. 

One victim of such a spiral would be the Treasury market, the largest bond market in the world. The country’s nagging debt problem is starting to break down that long-standing reliability of Treasury securities, and could eventually cause demand to collapse, according to Henry Paulson, who served as Treasury secretary during the George W. Bush administration. 

“That’s a dangerous thing,” he said Thursday during an interview with Bloomberg TV, describing a scenario where demand and prices for Treasuries fall as foreign interest in the market declines.

It’s no exaggeration to say Treasury securities underpin multiple parts of the global financial system and are foundational to the way the U.S. government finances itself. The government is able to offset its gaping deficit by issuing Treasury securities, including bonds, bills, and notes, which are then purchased by a wide range of investors including foreign governments and pension funds.

Demand for securities is what informs Treasury yields, which serve as a benchmark for virtually every other borrowing cost ranging from mortgage rates to student loans. When yields rise, those costs rise with them. 

The Treasury market is also a haven asset. In times of crisis, investors around the world have historically piled into U.S. government debt precisely because it is considered the safest store of value on the planet. Ever-present international demand for U.S. government bonds has played a sizable role in turning the dollar into the world’s reserve currency and is a big reason why the U.S. has been able to rack up such a large spending tab. 

That status, however, is not guaranteed. Escalating risk tied to the nation’s debt obligations could push investors to require higher yields on Treasuries, forcing interest rates up, which would make the deficit even more difficult to resolve.

Should enough investors back out of buying Treasuries, the Federal Reserve would step in as a buyer of last resort, Paulson said, a dynamic that might accelerate the government’s debt spiral by further eroding confidence in the U.S. economy’s stability. 

He called for a last-resort measure to halt the spiral if the situation deteriorates to that point. “We need an emergency break-the-glass plan, which is targeted and short-term, on the shelf, so it’s ready to go when we hit the wall.” 

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, a nonpartisan think tank, has advocated for something similar, recently proposing a plan that would allow the government to nimbly navigate its stressed budget the next time the economy enters a downturn.

As for when such a crisis might occur, Paulson said it would be hard to predict, depending on a variety of factors including the debt’s trajectory and the general state of the economy. But nearing that moment without a plan, he continued, would be a self-defeating exercise.

“It will be vicious,” he said. “We have to prepare for that eventuality.”


Famed economist Mohamed El-Erian says there's a troubling supply and demand problem brewing in the US bond market

Business Insider
Samuel O'Brient
Fri, April 17, 2026 
Economist Mohamed El-Erian speaking at an event at The Cambridge Union.
Bloomberg/Getty Images
  • Mohamed El-Erian sees a problem brewing in the US bond market.

  • The renowned economist warned that this could lead to further problems for investors.

  • He also sees the growing deficit as a problem that is likely to get worse.

Mohamed El-Erian has warned investors of problems in private credit, but he also sees trouble brewing in the market for US government debt.

El-Erian outlined his views on the Treasury market in an interview on CNBC, highlighting an emerging supply and demand issue that has him concerned.

"We have developed a fundamental imbalance between the amount of issuance we're going to see and the amount of money available to buy that issuance," he said.

El-Erian noted that it poses complications for the US economy as the government ramps up its efforts to sell more debt at a time when buyers might be scarce and as concerns are already swirling about the US debt and budget deficit.

He revealed a few specific factors he sees weighing on the US bond market as new bond supply ramps up, putting downward pressure on prices and upward pressure on yields.

"We're running a deficit of 6% or 7% of GDP," he said. "We have enormous refinancing to be done, and companies are issuing a lot more than they've had in the past."

El-Erian also addressed the recent statements made by former US Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, who warned investors on Thursday to prepare for a "vicious" bond market crash that the government is going to have to deal with.

While El-Erian noted that he views Paulson's claims as "alarmist," he acknowledged that he sees other problems stemming from the demand side as interest from foreign buyers weakens.

In February, Chinese regulators urged banks to scale back on US debt holdings. Now El-Erian seems to think this problem is accelerating.

"Buyers get nervous," he said. "They want market solutions. They don't want any price imposed on them. That's a concern. But I think the fundamental issue is that the market doesn't realize we have this imbalance that's going to get bigger."


A world going broke: IMF says America’s $39 trillion national debt is actually a global problem—and AI may be the only rescue

Fortune
Nick Lichtenberg
Updated Fri, April 17, 2026 at 12:42 PM EDT
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The IMF’s Rodrigo Valdés speaks during a Fiscal Monitor press briefing in Washington, D.C., on April 15, 2026.
 (Kent NISHIMURA / AFP via Getty Images)

America’s $39 trillion national debt has become a familiar political football—batted around in budget negotiations, invoked at congressional hearings, and largely ignored between elections. But what the International Monetary Fund laid out Wednesday is something more unsettling: The U.S. isn’t an outlier. It’s just the most visible symptom of a global disease.

At the spring launch of its biannual Fiscal Monitor, IMF Fiscal Affairs Director Rodrigo Valdésopened with a stark framing: “The world economy is being tested again with the consequences of the war in the Middle East—and this is a world that has less degrees of freedom as public finances are more stretched in many, many countries.”

The fund projected global public debt will hit 99% of world GDP by 2028, breaching the 100% threshold sooner than previously forecast. Under stress scenarios representing the 95th percentile of plausible outcomes, that figure could spike to 121% within three years.

America’s tab keeps growing

The U.S. remains the marquee case study in fiscal dysfunction. Washington’s deficit narrowed slightly last year—from close to 8% to below 7% of GDP—partly boosted by tariff revenues flowing into federal coffers, but the improvement was fleeting. “Our forecast is that this deficit goes back to around 7.5% and stays there for the near future,” Valdés told reporters, with U.S. debt now on track to exceed 125% of GDP this year and potentially 142% by 2031.

The adjustment needed to simply stabilize—not reduce—that trajectory would require fiscal tightening of roughly 4 percentage points of GDP. “That is not minor, of course,” Valdés said. It would rank among the largest peacetime fiscal adjustments in modern American history. Already, warning signals are flickering in bond markets. The premium U.S. Treasuries once commanded over other advanced-economy debt is narrowing. “These are signs that markets are not as sanguine—as forgiving—as they were in the past,” Valdés said. “The more time passes, the more pressure you could face down the road.”

His message to Congress was direct: “This cannot wait forever.”

The whole world is overdrawn

Washington’s problem looks almost manageable next to the global picture. The fiscal gap—the distance between where countries’ primary balances actually sit and where they need to be to stabilize debt—has worsened by roughly one percentage point compared to the five years before COVID.

“This is not just a cyclical problem,” Valdés said flatly. “It basically reflects policy choices—permanently higher spending and lower revenues.” Real interest rates are now running some six percentage points above pre-pandemic levels, compounding the burden of every existing dollar of debt. Every year of delay makes the eventual reckoning more severe.

The energy trap making it worse

The ongoing Middle East conflict is adding a fresh dimension of fiscal temptation—and danger. As fuel and food prices climb, governments are reaching for a politically easy but economically toxic tool: broad-based energy subsidies and excise tax cuts. The IMF didn’t mince words.

“Broad-based energy subsidies or excise reductions are not the best tool,” Valdés said. “They distort price signals, are fiscally costly, regressive, and hard to unwind.” Worse, when half the world shields consumers from higher energy prices, the remaining half absorbs all the demand adjustment. “Domestic policies affect global prices,” Valdés warned—and IMF modeling suggests the spillover effect could effectively double the original price shock for countries that don’t subsidize.

Era Dabla-Norris, who leads the work on the Fiscal Monitor, noted governments’ response this time has been “much more restrained” than during the 2022 energy crisis, but cautioned that with fiscal space now “much more constrained,” the costs of reverting to old habits would be severe. The fund’s prescription: Protect people, not prices—targeted, temporary support for the most vulnerable, not blanket relief for everyone.

AI: The wild card that could change everything

In a briefing otherwise defined by grim arithmetic, artificial intelligence emerged as the closest thing to a lifeline. Dabla-Norris said AI could fundamentally transform how governments operate by boosting productivity, tightening tax administration, and improving delivery of health and education services: “It can be used to fundamentally reshape the way governments do their business.”

But the technology cuts both ways. AI concentrates wealth, disrupts labor markets, and could quietly hollow out the income tax and payroll tax bases that modern social contracts depend on. “Are our current tax systems—are our current social protection systems—fit for purpose?” Dabla-Norris asked, a question she said every government needs to urgently answer. “Because there’s a lot of uncertainty in the way AI will play out…what actual impact it will have on labor markets, what actual impact it will have on inequality. So the challenge for government is really to see whether their systems are adaptable and that they can meet the risks that it portends.”

For this story, Fortune journalists used generative AI as a research tool. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.



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