Fiscal doomsday reached with $193.6 trillion gap
Comment & Opinion
April 10, 2026

Fiscal doomsday reached with $193.6 trillion gap

The most important number in the United States is $193.6 trillion. That’s how much extra money will be needed to fund Social Security and Medicare indefinitely, even after all payroll taxes and premiums are collected.

The Fiscal Year 2025 Financial Report of the U.S. Government, released on March 19, declared that “the current fiscal path is unsustainable,” and the government will be forced to cut benefits by 2033.

The Treasury’s financial report has sounded the alarm on safety net programs for years, but the estimates are now more dire than ever. Medicare Part B — which funds doctors’ visits, vaccines, equipment like wheelchairs and more — makes up most of the funding gap.

It can be difficult to comprehend just how much money $193.6 trillion really is. Every government expense in history since 1787 has added up to $132 trillion. The net worth of every billionaire on the planet combined is $20.1 trillion.

The Treasury says there are only three ways to close the funding gap: borrow money, raise taxes or cut benefits. To make the budget sustainable within 75 years, America would need to immediately cut non-interest spending by 21%, raise all taxes by 25%, or some combination, according to the Treasury.

Under current policy, that will not happen. America has borrowed money to fund its budget deficits every year since 2001. The country is expected to borrow almost $2 trillion this year to help fund Social Security, Medicare, defense and more.

Borrowing increases the debt held by the public, which the Treasury predicts will hit 200% of the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP) by 2049. If that happens, “no amount of future tax increases or spending cuts could avoid the government defaulting on its debt,” according to the Penn Wharton Budget Model. Interest rates and inflation would go through the roof.

The financial report did not receive much media attention, but several experts issued severe warnings.

The Cato Institute wrote that it would be “delusional” to suggest we can avoid cutting spending on Social Security and Medicare. They suggest raising the retirement age for Social Security and targeting benefits for seniors who need them most.

Former Comptroller General David Walker and Johns Hopkins economic professor Steve Hanke wrote that “Congress has clearly lost control of the nation’s finances. America is facing a fiscal catastrophe. The reckoning, long deferred, is becoming impossible to ignore.”

Altering or reducing entitlement spending is politically unpopular, but the nation’s finances suggest it will soon be inevitable.

(The #WasteOfTheDay is from forensic auditors at OpenTheBooks.com via RealClearWire.)

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