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America's Debt Avalanche: A Warning of Trouble Ahead

EDITOR'S NOTES

Larry Fink, CEO of BlackRock Inc. is sounding the alarm about America’s growing problem with debt, saying it’s the worst he’s ever seen. According to Fink, the United States is piling up debt so fast that it could lead to big economic problems, similar to what happened in Japan years ago when their economy barely grew for a long time. What’s worse, the cost of just keeping up with the interest on this mountain of debt is shooting through the roof. We can’t keep pretending the rest of the world will always be there to bail us out by buying our debt. Those days might be ending, and then what? Sitting on our hands isn’t an option unless we’re keen on watching the economy implode. Perhaps it’s time to take drastic action toward hedging our wealth and portfolios.

BlackRock Inc. Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink said the US public debt situation “is more urgent than I can ever remember” and that the country needs to adopt policies to spur economic growth.

The nation can’t rely on taxes and spending cuts to get the problem under control, Fink wrote in his annual letter Tuesday. He raised the prospect of a “bad scenario” akin to Japan’s economy in the late 1990s and early 2000s, which led to a period of austerity and stagnation.

“A high-debt America would also be one where it’s much harder to fight inflation since monetary policymakers could not raise rates without dramatically adding to an already unsustainable debt-servicing bill,” said Fink, 71.

The cost of servicing the debt has already ballooned, and the 3 percentage points in extra interest payments the US government now must pay on 10-year Treasuries compared with three years ago is “very dangerous,” he wrote.

“More leaders should pay attention to America’s snowballing debt,” Fink wrote, saying the US can’t take for granted that investors will continue to want to buy as much US debt. Foreign countries are building their own capital markets and are likely to invest domestically, he said.

“Is a debt crisis inevitable? No,” he wrote, calling for capital markets to help grow the economy through infrastructure investments, especially in the energy industry.

This article originally appeared on Yahoo Finance