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The usa in debt

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BRAHMACHARI

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In recent times a common topic of discussion in many religious channels of the USA is that the USA is indebted to the tune of 17 Trillion Dollars and when divided among the citizens of USA, it burdens upon every citizen of the US including children, a debt of US Dollars 50,000.00.

Does that mean the US is Financially bankrupt? If yes, are the US putting on an act of superficial prosperity and super-power status?

A significant portion of the revenue by IT and ITES companies in India is outsourced from the US. What would be the fate of the IT Professionals in India and of the IT Cos in India if the US debt comes to the limelight?

Would all the IT Cos in India be closed and would all our IT professionals lose job overnight?
 
Would all the IT Cos in India be closed and would all our IT professionals lose job overnight?

To answer this particular question, No. Most of the major IT companies moved away from USA and into other markets - Europe, African and South America.
However, there are quite a few areas that are dependent on America - like the amount of advertising coming out of that country is huge. SO that might take a hit.

At this point, IT professionals are treated like dogs anyways.. There are 20 to 30 people waiting in line for one job. And because companies are handing out pink slips like chocolates most of them are playing it safe and taking a paycut to stay in jobs.
 
The American economy borrows money to live luxuriously:

1. 56% of Americans have a sub prime rating

2. 52% of Americans can't afford the house that they live in

3. 47% use 50% of their pay checks to pay off the debt

4. 2/3rd of college students graduate with student debt and it is growing

5. Including government debt, business debt, mortgage debt and consumer debt, the total debt is 59.4 trillion dollars in debt.

But USA need not feel alarmed..It is not a savings led economy..It is consumption led..Americans will borrow & grow fatter! Do not worry!
 
The American economy borrows money to live luxuriously:

1. 56% of Americans have a sub prime rating

2. 52% of Americans can't afford the house that they live in

3. 47% use 50% of their pay checks to pay off the debt

4. 2/3rd of college students graduate with student debt and it is growing

5. Including government debt, business debt, mortgage debt and consumer debt, the total debt is 59.4 trillion dollars in debt.

But USA need not feel alarmed..It is not a savings led economy..It is consumption led..Americans will borrow & grow fatter! Do not worry!

Since dollar is the universal currency (and this got accomplished by many different strategies over decades) it is held in higher esteem than Gold (though Dollar reserve is not tied to Gold anymore since Nixon era) . USA can print dollars and pay back the debt since printing is like creating new reserves of Gold at will!

Obviously many countries would like to get dollar be not a universal currency but they do not want to support this right away for own selfish reasons. In the mean time US Congress may stop the printing of dollar (so called 'quantitative easing' by the Feds) and link somewhat to commodity like Gold in order to earn the credibility needed for an universal currency.

Regardless what anyone says about USA I would ask them to look at how they are conducting their life and what modern contraption and methods they use. It will be surprising to note that the seminal ideas for almost all innovations that touch our lives came from USA.
The internet that is the backbone for the communication here came from USA.

The reason I am stating this is because with bit more character and smartness USA can earn the rights for dollar to remain as the world's currency.

I am hopeful if our PM Modi goes through with his vision the Rupee rates to dollar will improve for India and India will not have dependence on specific markets for its employment (e.g., IT, call centers etc)
 
In a misguided effort to promote further understanding of the budget, many analysts describe the revenues and expenditures of the Federal Government as if our government were a typical family arguing about stretching their monthly paychecks to cover expenses.

The analogy is false for several reasons:Debt Is Never-Ending. Unlike humans, whose lives eventually end, the government goes on from one century to the next. As a consequence, the debts owed by the government can be transferred to future generations, never to be totally amortized, by paying interest on the outstanding balance and reissuing new debt instruments as older obligations come due.
Income Is Flexible. While families and individuals have a fixed amount of income to cover their obligations, the Federal Government can rapidly increase income through its tax policies, regulations, and collection efforts.
Expenses Are Flexible. Individual government programs can be modified or even eliminated to reduce or delay expenditures. For example, simply raising the retirement age for Social Security recipients or transferring executive responsibility for specific federal programs to state governments will reduce federal expenditures.
According to Norman Ornstein, resident scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, a balanced budget amendment “is about the most irresponsible action imaginable,” and would eliminate the flexibility of the government to respond to the needs of the public, whether it be an emergency such as a hurricane, or financial assistance to the unemployed during recessions. This is because a balanced budget by definition eliminates the possibility of running a deficit or a surplus, and emergencies, by definition, are unplanned and cannot be quantified prior to the actual event. In such an event, the Federal Government would be forced to either not act or to transfer funds from approved programs in order to respond, potentially defunding critical programs.

The news of the death of US economy are premature.
 
USA agency's the Largest Holder of U.S. Debt, Not China
One third of the debt is held in the U.S. Treasury -- borrowed from the "surpluses" in the trusts of Social Security, unemployment, disability, federal employees, hospital insurance and more (source: The World Fact Book). The Federal Reserve holds $2.6 trillion of our treasuries. As of June 2012, China was the largest foreign holder of U.S. treasuries, with $1.16 trillion (of our "debt"), while Japan held $1.1 trillion in U.S. treasuries (source: Treasury.gov).
 
The Budget and Economic Outlook: 2014 to 2024 - CBO
The federal budget deficit has fallen sharply during the past few years, and it is on a path to decline further this year and next year. CBO estimates that under current law, the deficit will total $514 billion in fiscal year 2014, compared with $1.4 trillion in 2009. At that level, this year’s deficit would equal 3.0 percent of the nation’s economic output, or gross domestic product (GDP)—close to the average percentage of GDP seen during the past 40 years.

.....................
The Economic Outlook Through 2017
Real GDP is projected to grow by 3.1 percent this year, by 3.4 percent in 2015 and 2016, and by 2.7 percent in 2017. CBO expects that those increases in output will spur businesses to hire more workers, pushing down the unemployment rate and tending to raise the rate of participation in the labor force (as some discouraged workers return to the labor force in search of jobs). That effect on participation in the labor force will keep the unemployment rate from falling as much as it would otherwise: CBO projects that the unemployment rate will decline only gradually over the next few years, finally dropping below 6.0 percent in 2017. Nevertheless, the labor force participation rate is projected to decline further because, according to CBO’s analysis, the upward pressure on that rate from improvements in the economy will be more than offset by downward pressure from demographic trends, especially the aging of the baby-boom generation.
 
Instead of using false and misleading information please read this report.
US Economic Outlook for 2014 and Beyond

Inflation will be between 1.5 - 1.6%. The core inflation rate (without gas or food prices) will be between 1.4-1.6%, well below the Fed's 2% target. It's projected to rise to between 1.7 - 2.0% in 2015, and between 1.8 - 2.0% in 2015. (Source: FOMC meeting, March 19, 2014)
.......................

The BLS assumes that the economy will fully recover from the recession by 2020, and that the labor force will return to full employment, or an unemployment rate of 4-5%. The biggest growth (5.7 million jobs) will occur in healthcare and other forms of social assistance as the American population ages.


The next largest increase (2.1 million jobs) will occur in professional and technical occupations. Most of this is in computer systems design, especially mobile technologies, and management, scientific, and technical consulting. Businesses will need advice on planning and logistics, implementing new technologies, and complying with workplace safety, environmental, and employment regulations.


Other large increases will occur in education (1.8 million jobs), retail (1.7 million jobs) and hotel/restaurants (1 million jobs). Another area is miscellaneous services (1.6 million jobs). This includes human resources, seasonal and temporary workers, and waste collection.


As housing recovers, construction will add 1.8 million jobs, while other areas of manufacturing will lose jobs due to technology and outsourcing. For more detail, see BLS Outlook on Employment.

.................
How It Affects US residents:


This will be a prosperous year, as we can finally say goodbye to the effects of the financial crisis. However, we've seen a bit of irrational exuberance in the stock market this year. Although we aren't there yet, that usually signals the peak of the business cycle. However, another recession is probably 2-3 years out. That's because this recovery has been so slow that it will take longer to reach the peak.


Therefore, best thing to do this year is to stay relentlessly focused on your own financial well-being. Continue to improve your skills and chart a clear course for your career. If you're invested in the stock market, stay alert for a pull-back, but get reinvested at the lows because the year will end better. As the economy improves, commodity prices, including gold, oil and even coffee, will stay at record lows. That should mean lower prices for food. All in all, a good time to reduce debt, build up your savings and increase your wealth.
 
More debt is not necessarily a bad thing. It just shows the utilization of leverage and a development of credit markets.
 
hi

USA had great recessions....it can over come recession too....now energy sector more growth...housing market is picking up....

energy self relined...not much depend om foreign oil....so time to take up to improve...IT sector is like engineering colleges

in tamil nadu.....supply more ..demand less....
 
The americans are fearfully foreseeing an economic recession in 2015, which they fear would be the worst ever.
 
1. US is not a banana republic. Its economy has a strong production base. It has in its command a large tract of the most fertile, virgin, cultivable soil. Its agriculture thus is very large in size compared to any other agriculture sector of any other country in the world. It's industrial production is also substantial. It produces some of the top of the table category technological products which includes weapons for the whole world. With such a strong production base which determines the GDP and the real value of its currency there is no chance of US going bankrupt.

2. The treasury bills of US in which all other countries of the world keep their forex balances are treasury promisory notes carrying a ridiculously low rate of interest when compared with the interest rates of those investing countries back home. Yet countries keep their surpluses in USD because it is the most accepted currency in the world. Right or wrong, like it or not, USD is the world currency in which maximum number of international transactions take place every day. Countries that want to buy anything and everything in the world market have to pay in USD most of their bills and that is why they keep their funds in US treasury notes as it offers some return too on that fund. USD is the preferred currency for settlement of transactions between countries of the world. So US debt is cheap funds put in the hands of US by the countries of the world. If someone is ready to lend you money at say 0.5% p.a. would you not be glad to accept it?

3. US is the only country (Venezuela too can be included) outside the Arab Peninsula to have a huge untapped oil reserve under its command. Wait for the oil reserves of world mostly held with SArabia, Iran, Iraq to be depleted to precarious levels, you will find US virtually ruling the market price of crude. Its Alaskan north sea oil reserve is so huge that it is estimated to be equivalent to entire SArabia's reserve now. And the call may not be far away at the current rate of consumption of oil by the world. Where is the scope for any bankruptsy in this scenario?

4. As far as IT and ITES industry is concerned, India offers quality labour at comparatively lower cost. As long as India manages its economy well and does not allow the inflation to go spiralling up and out of control like some of the once roaring giants of East Asia did a few decades ago, we can expect demand to be sustained for India's human resources which are excellent in quality. US does not have such resources at that level at which Indians do a wonderful job. India might not have yet produced cutting edge technology products like OSs, ERP products, Analytics SWs, Cloud based original solutions etc., but we have human resources who have understood these products very well and can do a lot innovative tinkering with these products which enhance their applicability. So demand for IT and ITES resources from India will continue as long as another country with adequate skill levels (includes English language skills) compete with India. The competitors are still far away struggling with their lack of language skills. India being a former Colony has helped it absorb some of the nuances and syntactic perceptions of thought processes in English. This stands it in good stead now. It is likely to remain so because the charm of English is still working on Indians.

5. India , if it can solve its energy shortage quickly-despite the hurdles placed by NGOs and all-it can attract a big chunk of the data maintenance service from world over. This is a power guzzler and so is costly in other countries. With Nuclear power India can quote a lower price for the particular ITES and can attract large chunk of business from world over. And India is reliable too politically. That adds to the attraction of India as the destination of world data preservation.
 
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The americans are fearfully foreseeing an economic recession in 2015, which they fear would be the worst ever.

hi sir,

still we called GREAT RECESSION 2015.....in USA...everything is great.....great country on earth....we know how to tackle

bankruptsy....any economical problem in USA......it will effect globaly...so stability of USA is better for global economy....
 
My 2c
1) US govt owes all the money in USD. This is important, since they can just print the money and get out of debt. US certainly is not going to be bankrupt because of its debt!
2) Nearly 1/3rd of the debt is debt owed by the govt to itself
3) The reason why US is able to borrow so much is the confidence others have on its economy - most recent great innovations and game changers have come from the US (iphone, google, microsoft, intel, facebook to name some) AND while the US imports cheap manufactured goods, it exports high margin goods (eg: iphone manufactured in China - profit margin for Foxconn is razor thin - <5% - profit margin for finished iphone ~40%). Almost all countries need USD, it also helps that it is the currency to buy Oil with.
4) Nearly 60% of revenues of Indian IT companies comes from the US. Just google up their financial reports
eg: w w w . infosys.com/investors/financials/Pages/segmental-income.aspx#geographic-segment
5) Well, apart from middle east there are other major oil producers (not counting venezuela and the US)
Canada, Russia, Britian-Norway (North Sea), China (it produces nearly 50% of its consumption and is expanding production), Malaysia, Indonesia (has become a net importer recently though)
6) There is no correlation between Indian inflation and quality of Indian talent - unless it is so rampant that the standard of education itself is drastically reduced
7) It is thanks to the pioneers of the IT industry (NRN, Premji et al) and our English speaking capability coupled with low cost of labor + govt deregulation from 1991 that we have an edge - and it is being rapidly eroded. FYI, Tianjin is being groomed as a hub for technology and finance. Our pluses are so far that we are warm bodies who can speak reasonable English and available at low cost. Unless we create products/innovate, its going to get tougher. Competitors are certainly not far away.
8) If the US falls into recession and if it is a deep one, rest of the world and esp India will be severely bruised
 
Dear Vagmi Sir,

Regarding your post #12. Very interesting indeed.

Sir, if whatever you have mentioned is true, and I wish it is true, it is good for everyone.

But, as regards the abundant crude-oil reserve unexploited in US, I have heard many people say this. But is it true sir? Or is it a deceptive myth by the US to make-believe the rest of the world that the US is indeed financially stable and to make the rest of the world to repose confidence in the economy of US? This doubt is also raised by many sir.
 
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post #15:

6) There is no correlation between Indian inflation and quality of Indian talent - unless it is so rampant that the standard of education itself is drastically reduced

There is a connection. If the inflation goes unchecked the labour will clamour for more and more. That will make Indian labour more and more costly. If , say, Indonesian labour is cheaper, the US will not mind importing them in place of Indian Geeks because they do as good a job as Indians. Inflation or no inflation standard of education depends on other factors in India.

Simply put, if 10 USD an hour is the rate at which Indian companies factor in their cost of human resources in their quote for a certain services, they will have to factor in a 15 USD per hour if the food and other inflation in India gallops out of control because the labour will certainly expect some compensation for the increase in cost of living and all the vintage slogans like ......Zindabad will be dusted and taken out. LOL.
 
Dear Vagmi Sir,

Regarding your post #12. Very interesting indeed.

Sir, if whatever you have mentioned is true, and I wish it is true, it is good for everyone.

But, as regards the abundant crude-oil reserve unexploited in US, I have heard many people say this. But is it true sir? Or is it a deceptive myth by the US to make-believe the rest of the world that the US is indeed financially stable and to make the rest of the world to repose confidence in the economy of US? This doubt is also raised by many sir.

Doubting Thomases will doubt everything. I have not seen the report prepared by any oil exploration team about the Northern Oil reserve and so I can not tell you anything about it more than what I have already said. But I believe Americans do not have to cook up such a story to win the confidence of the world. They already enjoy that.

The too many 'sirs' in your post make me uncomfortable. I would prefer to be addressed as just Vaagmi because I am not even old enough to be addressed as a sir and knowledge wise I am just average. Address me as Vaagmi (not vagmi) and that will make me happy. Thank you.
 
I remember to have read that Saddam Hussain of Iraq (who was, at one time, a very close friend of the US and so knew its Achilles Heel) secretly started negotiating with EU countries who had differences with US (Germany being the most powerful among them) to switch all Iraqui oil trade to Euros instead of in US$. Since such a thing would have meant the death knell of US, Bush lost no time in invading Iraq and the rest - as all of us know - is now recent history.

Hence, for all the bombastics about the US, the truth remains that it is the world's highest debtor country and if ever anyone is able to shift world's trust in US$, the US will be a "gone case" within a very short time. As change is the only constant thing in this universe, it is not possible to rule out such a development also in the future. Who knows whether the ISIS will gain control of Iraq's oil and will implement their Sunni leader Saddam's idea?
 
I remember to have read that Saddam Hussain of Iraq (who was, at one time, a very close friend of the US and so knew its Achilles Heel) secretly started negotiating with EU countries who had differences with US (Germany being the most powerful among them) to switch all Iraqui oil trade to Euros instead of in US$. Since such a thing would have meant the death knell of US, Bush lost no time in invading Iraq and the rest - as all of us know - is now recent history.

Hence, for all the bombastics about the US, the truth remains that it is the world's highest debtor country and if ever anyone is able to shift world's trust in US$, the US will be a "gone case" within a very short time. As change is the only constant thing in this universe, it is not possible to rule out such a development also in the future. Who knows whether the ISIS will gain control of Iraq's oil and will implement their Sunni leader Saddam's idea?

dear Sri Sangom,

Welcome back. How do you do? I pray to God to give you good health. Please keep coming here as often as is possible. I think S Hussain should have known that US is too big an entity to comprehend with his pea nut brain. When the world has a severe drought it is US to which countries look up to to feed their hungry millions so that they survive in one piece without getting gobbled up by the millions. Do you remember PL 480 imports and the snide description that India's millions lived from ship load to ship load of PL 480 substandard wheat? US is a Huge MNC run with utmost efficiency. Its policies are decided by a few powerful individuals and Corporates. A war, a subversion, an assassination of a leader, a sale of deadly weapons, a dropping of a nuclear bomb, a straffing with napalm to defoliate an entire forest along with the hiding humans and animals and anything and every thing here happens only first as a bubble of thought in the conference room there and then at the place of action. Saddam was a fool as he banged his head against the wall. US's debt is internal debt and so it is not deadly.

In India we have companies who avail finance from Commercial banks. Either the business idea fails, the management is poor, or the intentions of the entrepreneur itself was to milk the banks -- we have bad debts. These bad debts are so huge that they threaten the viability of the lending bank itself. After making adequate provision for the bad debts the bank has nothing left to pay its share holders even if it does a little bit of fudging about determining the bad debt and naming it as such. And Govt of India is the major shareholder who has to worry about its banking company's viability and survival apart from the depositors. So what do we do? There is an innovative trick which is used to whitewash and sanitize the Balance sheets of the banks. We call it asset reconstruction. We convert bad assets into good assets by using this method and avoid providing for their failure in course of time. Every one is happy that the reckoning has been postponed for another day. The shareholder gets his dividend, the employees get their rise, the executives get their promotion, the shares sell as usual in the market, the depositors just do not bother and every thing is hunky and dory till the day of reckoning. Internal debt of US is far better than this hoax played by Indian banks, GOI, and the Industrialists. In US such games are not played. If you reach bankruptsy, you will be ruthlessly closed and rateable payed to your creditors and you will be just forgotten. USD is supported by pretty strong fundamentals and hence will not let the country go bankrupt ever. This is my line of argument.
 
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Investors are still eager to buy American debt; the Treasury's last auction for 30-year bonds was almost three times oversubscribed.
Financial analysts and economists don't see any urgent threat of higher interest rates or unsustainable debts; if they did, then interest rates on Treasury securities would already be higher today.
 
Thankfully, we are blessed with a culture of individual and corporate enterprise, management and entrepreneurialism. We can credit the need throughout our history to deal with vast markets stretching over mountains, deserts and rivers, and the challenge of meeting the requirements of enormously diverse populations. We are also blessed to have a national foundation of respect for the rule of law that has enabled American business to operate by contract rather than kinship and custom. Management practices here have been assisted by a level of labor flexibility that is the envy of the world. No other country has a population so imbued with a culture of self-improvement, and the capacity to be mobile both physically and mentally.


No other country benefits to the degree that America does from an egalitarian culture that has rejected primogeniture and instead is guided by the rule of merit and a common belief in technology and scientific management. No other country has focused on and invested so much in training and retraining its people, and has drawn so many of the world’s best and brightest to its labs and research centers. It is no wonder that we can attract young talent from the world’s top universities and from many of our competitor countries; talent understands that it will be exposed in America to a unique level of opportunity, including in many cases the possibility of participating on an equity basis in the businesses that stem from innovation.


No other country sees its most talented members moving to such a great extent into the private sector, to be financially rewarded as they are here as creators and doers. Witness the stunning valuations, in the billions of dollars, recently given to what not too long ago were seen as start-up companies – think Instagram, Facebook, Twitter. Today, blue-chip companies no longer represent the greatest opportunity for creative young doers, for they have to compete with thousands of smaller businesses and start-ups with great potential to thrive and grow even as many others fail. As new products are released, our business culture’s marketing and advertising skills can maximize their potential to succeed.


In fact, then, America nurtures the very qualities that offer the most to tomorrow’s promising industries and technologies – to wit, flexibility, openness and a can-do attitude. Add to this a financial world that increasingly funds the future, not the past – and not with short-term capital but rather with long-term risky investments, reflecting a diversified culture that understands that necessary economic synergies come when there is money to back these new ideas.





On top of that, we have an enormous cultural sway worldwide, one that binds Americans together to a greater extent than in any other country and also binds the people of the world together as they share in popular American culture, music, Hollywood entertainment, Google and consumerism. Even as it may seem to be eroding, we are still living in the American century.
 
But predicting the decline of the United States has always been risky business. In the 1970s and late 1980s, expectations of waning power were followed by periods of geopolitical resurgence.


There’s every reason to believe that cycle is recurring today. Despite gridlock in Washington, America is recovering from the financial crisis and combining enduring strengths with new sources of influence, including energy. Meanwhile, emerging powers are running into troubles of their own. Taken together, these developments are ushering in a new era of American strategic advantage.


Emerging economies were the darlings of the past decade, growing at an average of roughly 7 percent annually between 2003 and 2012. By some calculations, China was poised to surpass the United States in GDP by 2016.


Today, the picture couldn’t look more different. Brazil’s growth rate has fallen from more than 7 percent in 2010 to just under 1 percent. Likewise, Indian growth tumbled to about 3 percent in 2012, down from double digits as recently as two years earlier. Perhaps most pronounced, China’s government is revising down its official growth targets. Analysts are no longer asking whether there will be a Chinese economic slowdown but rather how hard the landing will be.


Morgan Stanley has identified five particularly fragile emerging-market currencies: Brazil’s real, India’s rupee, Indonesia’s rupiah, South Africa’s rand and Turkey’s lira. Those countries are vulnerable to high inflation, large deficits, low growth and a downturn in China. And they may soon face problems in international financing.These “rising powers” are hardly faring better collectively. The international institutions they established — BRICS, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and IBSA — continue to disappoint.


At the same time, the United States is experiencing a turnaround of fortunes. The unemployment rate has fallen to just over 7 percent from an October 2009 peak of 10 percent. By contrast, euro-zone unemployment remains stuck at around 12 percent.


The U.S. fiscal picture is also looking up. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimates that the annual budget deficit will drop below $650 billion in 2013, the smallest shortfall since 2008 and approximately half the size it was in 2011. Meanwhile, the dollar remains the world’s top reserve currency.


Even more transformative, the United States is experiencing an energy revolution that the McKinsey Global Institute estimates could add as much as 4 percent to annual GDP and create up to 1.7 million new jobs by 2020. America is poised to overtake Russia as the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas, and there are signs that low-cost and abundant energy is driving a revival of the U.S. manufacturing industry. Although the United States will have an enduring interest in stable global energy prices, it will no longer rely on direct and uncertain access to Middle Eastern oil, in sharp contrast to energy-starved countries in Asia.


In terms of hard power, the U.S. military is at the forefront of next-generation technologies, including unmanned systems, robotics and lasers. Even more superior than its hardware is its software: the command and control systems to conduct highly advanced joint operations and major wars.
The United States also remains the linchpin of the international community. Through hard-nosed diplomacy, economic pressure and the specter of military action, Washington has retained its ability to marshal effective multinational coalitions, bringing down Libya’s Moammar Gaddafi, getting weapons inspectors on the ground in Syria and embarking on serious negotiations to curb Iran’s nuclear weapons program. You can quibble with process and style, but it’s hard to argue that any of these would have happened without the United States.


More broadly, and most important, the United States is blessed with a superior combination of sound fundamentals in demography, geography, higher education and innovation. That ensures it has the people, ideas and security to thrive at home and on the world stage. There’s a reason elites around the world remain eager to send their fortunes, and often their families, to the United States.
America?s not in decline ? it?s on the rise - The Washington Post
 
I remember to have read that Saddam Hussain of Iraq (who was, at one time, a very close friend of the US and so knew its Achilles Heel) secretly started negotiating with EU countries who had differences with US (Germany being the most powerful among them) to switch all Iraqui oil trade to Euros instead of in US$. Since such a thing would have meant the death knell of US, Bush lost no time in invading Iraq and the rest - as all of us know - is now recent history.

Hence, for all the bombastics about the US, the truth remains that it is the world's highest debtor country and if ever anyone is able to shift world's trust in US$, the US will be a "gone case" within a very short time. As change is the only constant thing in this universe, it is not possible to rule out such a development also in the future. Who knows whether the ISIS will gain control of Iraq's oil and will implement their Sunni leader Saddam's idea?

Trading with *dollars only* was a deal US enforced in return for OPEC countries to be able to 'fix' oil prices (with USA being one of the largest importers of oil).

Similarly the most favored trading nation status was given to China in return for all its trades be done with anyone in dollars only.

When during Nixon era the linkage of dollar to Gold reserve was severed no one really cared since dollar by then was worth more than gold for all trade purposes. There had been series of steps like this taken to ensure dollar remained the world currency.

China would prefer to move away from dollar as the world currency but do not want to risk the value of its dollar holding.
Saddam of Iraq tried to go away from Petrodollar based dealings and was dealt a blow.

If USA will stop its 'quantitative easing' soon (i.e., printing dollars) then dollar can continue to enjoy its current status.

USA is still the hub of all key innovations that touch most individual's lives in the world. You and I can look at what we do in any given day and trace where the innovation for the products and services we use originated.

USA has its own brand of corruption via legal election contributions. This has resulted in grid lock between ruling and opposition parties often leading to smear campaigns. Things have been stagnant and the country has not been able to fully leverage all the talent it has.

I personally know many who have advanced degrees (PhD etc) from well known institutions that remain jobless for over 18 months.

The manufacturing sector has seen major decline over decades. The laws enacted with the help of corrupt lobbyist is threatening true competition. Rather than let GM (General Motors) die a graceful death the corrupt government machinery intervened only to give new life to the company. Today there are many GM cars that are literally blowing up due to faulty parts and the company has recalled tens of millions of vehicles.

Lobbyist of the past hold key position in the administration. For example the current FCC organization is pushing for repealing net neutrality which will benefit major donors in the communication industry like at&t and cable companies. They will be able to control price based on what is going over the internet pipe.

While such negative forces are at play, there is still optimism among those who are driven to succeed. My own kids while still doing PhD have bootstrapped a start up in biotech space to cure diseases that have no cures today. They have reached a respectable standing in less than two years. I cannot think of any other country where such actions would have been possible and that too with very limited money as a starting point.

America still has inherent strengths and it has the capacity to turn around in a big manner.
 
Demise of USA will happen one day, just like Sun will use up all hydrogen and die. It will, eventually, consume all of its fuel, and cease to exist as an active star. Our Sun will continue to get increasingly more hot, and larger in diameter over time. Eventually, the Sun will expand to such a degree that the Earth will "melt" due to its close proximity to the Sun. When it does finally run out of fuel, it will slowly grow cold becoming a "brown dwarf" star. This will take about 5 billion years though and after one billion years, the Earth will no longer be able to support human life.

I would not hold my breath for USA economy to collapse. It will be well beyond our life span.
 
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