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Economynational debt

A ‘debt spiral’ before a fiscal crisis: Interest on the national debt will be growing faster than GDP in just 5 years, think tank warns

Nick Lichtenberg
By
Nick Lichtenberg
Nick Lichtenberg
Business Editor
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Nick Lichtenberg
By
Nick Lichtenberg
Nick Lichtenberg
Business Editor
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March 16, 2026, 12:21 PM ET
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President Donald Trump attends a tour of a Thermo Fisher Scientific facility on March 11, 2026 in Reading, Ohio. President Trump is highlighting his administration's push to lower drug prices at the biotechnology and pharmaceutical company.Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

The U.S. national debt is hurtling toward $39 trillion, but a Washington fiscal watchdog says the more alarming milestone isn’t a dollar figure—it’s a ratio. And it arrives in just five years.

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According to a recent analysis from the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), the Congressional Budget Office’s latest projections show that by fiscal year 2031, the average interest rate paid on the federal debt will exceed the country’s rate of economic growth. In the dry shorthand of economists, “R will exceed G.” In plain terms, that means that the cost of borrowing will be growing faster than the economy’s ability to pay for it.​

“Once interest rates exceed the growth rate…primary deficits will lead debt to grow indefinitely,” the CRFB warned in a blog post published March 9.​

A guardrail, quietly disappearing

For most of the past 60 years—including all of the last 15—the U.S. has benefited from a structural cushion: interest rates on federal debt stayed below the pace of economic growth. That relationship, which economists measure as R<G, meant that even as the government ran persistent deficits, debt as a share of GDP could remain stable or even shrink. The economy, growing faster than the debt’s carrying cost, was effectively eroding the burden over time.​

Real interest rates on federal debt averaged just 0.9% over the past 15 years, while real GDP growth averaged 2.2%. That buffer is now evaporating, according to the CRFB.​

Since 2023, most newly issued Treasury debt has carried yields between 4% and 5%—rates that exceed the economy’s long-term expected growth rate. As older, cheaper debt matures and gets rolled over at these higher rates, the average interest cost on the entire federal debt stock is creeping upward. CBO now projects that by 2031, both R and G will hit roughly 3.8% nominally—and then diverge, with R pulling ahead.​

The spiral mechanism

The CRFB describes what comes next as a self-reinforcing feedback loop. Higher debt pushes interest rates up and slows economic growth. Slower growth reduces tax revenues. Reduced revenues widen deficits. Wider deficits add more debt. More debt pushes rates higher still. “Over time,” the group warns, “this could lead to accelerating growth in the debt, which could eventually be too rapid to correct, absent a major disruption or crisis.”​

Even CBO’s relatively optimistic “baseline” scenario—which does not model additional tax cuts or spending increases—projects the national debt will balloon to an unprecedented 175% of GDP by 2056. By that year, CBO estimates the interest rate will reach 4.2%, against a GDP growth rate of just 3.5%—a gap of 0.7 percentage points. Closing that gap alone, the CRFB calculates, would require roughly $2.7 trillion in annual spending cuts or tax increases—in 2056 alone.​

The political wildcard

The CRFB’s warning carries an implicit rebuke of Washington’s current fiscal trajectory. If lawmakers continue enacting tax cuts and spending increases—as they did in the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which CBO estimates will add $4.7 trillion to deficits through 2035—the spiral “could arrive sooner and with greater intensity than projected.”​

The national debt is expected to cross $39 trillion within days, up more than $2.6 trillion in the past year alone. But as the CRFB makes clear, the real danger isn’t the next trillion. It’s the arithmetic of what happens when a country can no longer grow its way out of its debt—and the window to act before that moment closes in just five years.

For this story, Fortune journalists used generative AI as a research tool. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing.

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About the Author
Nick Lichtenberg
By Nick LichtenbergBusiness Editor
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Nick Lichtenberg is business editor and was formerly Fortune's executive editor of global news.

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