Who Owns the U.S.?

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
by Greg Bocquet
Monday, February 28, 2011

Regardless of how much closer Obama's budget brings our economy into a balance of payments not seen since 2001, we will continue to run deficits for the next decade, and the national debt will keep growing every year that happens.


While most of the country's $14 trillion debt is held by private banks in the U.S., the Treasury Department and the Federal Reserve Board estimate that, as of December, about $4.4 trillion of it was held by foreign governments that purchase our treasury securities much as an investor buys shares in a company and comes to own his or her little chunk of the organization.

Looking at the list of our top international creditors, a few overall characteristics show some interesting trends: Three of the top 10 spots are held by China and its constituent parts, and while two of our biggest creditors are fellow English-speaking democracies, a considerable share of our debt is held by oil exporters that tend to be decidedly less friendly in other areas of international relations.

Here we break down the top 10 foreign holders of U.S. debt, comparing each creditor's holdings with the equivalent chunk of the United States they "own," represented by the latest (2009) state gross domestic product data released by the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. Obviously, these creditors won't actually take states from us as payment on our debts, but it's fun to imagine what states and national monuments they could assert a claim to.

Sample of story:

CANADA
Amount of U.S. debt: $134.6 billion

Share of total foreign debt: 3.1%

They say that a friend in need is a friend indeed, and our neighbor to the north has proven to be a kind and generous creditor in our time of financial need. Canada holds about 3.1% of our foreign debt, or $134.6 billion. If friend were to become enemy and Canada were looking to annex some U.S. land to cover the debt though, the country would have an easy time of it. The combined GDP of Maine ($51.3 billion), New Hampshire ($59.4 billion) and Vermont ($25.4 billion) comes close to Canada's debt holdings at $136.1 billion.

Residents of the three states in our extreme northeast corner should start practicing their French: They might become Québécois one of these days.

who-owns-the-us: Personal Finance News from Yahoo! Finance
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
I wonder what you are getting at.

The treasury notes that other counties hold are not like promissory notes or where say China can say "ok we now want to cash in" - it doesn't work that way.

Say Canada wants to claim some of their investment, they have to sell it to say the UK or Germany. The same goes for China, they can't dump the treasury on the open market but have to sell it or wait until maturity.

By the way, ever travel up in New Hampshire or Upper Maine?
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
I wonder what you are getting at.

The treasury notes that other counties hold are not like promissory notes or where say China can say "ok we now want to cash in" - it doesn't work that way.

Say Canada wants to claim some of their investment, they have to sell it to say the UK or Germany. The same goes for China, they can't dump the treasury on the open market but have to sell it or wait until maturity.

By the way, ever travel up in New Hampshire or Upper Maine?

Used to do a lot of Vermont and New Hampshire and some Maine with my Canadian Carrier...I liked it up there....
 
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