Unlike households, governments are often able to sustain large debts. For example, in 2015, the U.S. government's total debt reached $18.1 trillion, approximately equal to 100.4% of GDP. At the time, according to the U.S. Treasury, the average interest rate paid by the government on its debt was 1.2%. However, running budget deficits becomes hard when very large debts are outstanding.
a. Calculate the dollar cost of the annual interest on the government's total debt, assuming the interest rate and debt figures previously cited. Enter your answer in billions of dollars, and round to the nearest tenth.
b. If the government operates on a balanced budget before interest payments are taken into account, at what rate must GDP grow for the debt-GDP ratio to remain unchanged? Enter your answer as a percentage and round to the nearest tenth of a percent.
c. Calculate the total increase in national debt if the government incurs a deficit of $600 billion in 2016. Enter your answer in billions of dollars and round to the nearest tenth.
d. At what rate would GDP have to grow in order for the debt-GDP ratio to remain unchanged when the deficit in 2016 is $600 billion? Enter your answer as a percentage and round your answer to the nearest hundredth of a percent.
e. Why is the debt-GDP ratio the preferred measure of a country's debt rather than the dollar value of the debt? Why is it important for a country to keep its debt-GDP ratio under control?
Annual interest: $ 217.2 billion