How Could America Get out of Debt? | What It Would Take

Debt can fall when yearly deficits shrink, interest costs stop snowballing, and the economy keeps growing for years under a plan that sticks.

“Get out of debt” sounds like a single decision. It isn’t. Debt comes down only after years of smaller deficits.

This piece gives you the math in plain English, then lays out the handful of moves that change the debt path. You’ll also get a quick scorecard you can use on any proposal, whether it comes from a president, Congress, or a think tank.

What federal debt means and what makes it rise

When the federal government spends more than it collects, it borrows. Those annual deficits stack up. Interest is added on top. Over time, the pile becomes today’s debt.

The headline total has two buckets: debt held by the public and intragovernmental holdings. The public-held portion is the one most tied to market rates.

Debt tends to climb for three repeat reasons:

  • Ongoing primary deficits: the gap between revenue and spending before interest.
  • Rising net interest: a bigger debt stock or higher rates raise interest outlays.
  • Shocks: recessions, wars, or emergencies that widen deficits for a stretch.

Net interest is the sleeper issue. Even with no new laws, interest spending can rise when rates rise or when more debt rolls over at higher yields. GAO notes that net interest outlays in fiscal year 2024 exceeded spending on Medicare and national defense, and GAO projects interest costs will keep rising under current policy.

Debt math you can use without a spreadsheet

Debt falls only when the government takes in more than it spends for a while. That can happen through higher revenue, lower spending, or a mix. Growth can help, yet it can’t carry a plan by itself.

Think in ratios, not only dollars

People quote debt in trillions. Analysts often watch debt as a share of GDP. GDP is a rough measure of the nation’s income base. If GDP rises and debt stays flat, the ratio falls. If debt rises faster than GDP, the ratio climbs.

Separate the deficit from interest

The deficit has two layers: the primary deficit (spending minus revenue, excluding interest) and net interest. A plan that trims the primary deficit can still fail if net interest keeps racing up. That’s why a plan needs both: a smaller primary gap and a credible path that keeps borrowing rates from staying high.

Stability beats perfection

A practical target is to stop the debt-to-GDP ratio from climbing, then push it down gradually.

Where the numbers are today

If you want the raw totals and the daily updates, use Treasury’s public data. The “Debt to the Penny” dataset shows total public debt outstanding and splits it into the two main categories. It’s a clean baseline for tracking progress, no pundit filter required.

How Could America Get out of Debt? With real budget math

To reduce debt, the country needs a plan that lasts longer than a single election cycle. The core task is to close the structural gap between what the government promises to spend and what it collects.

That gap is driven by a few big budget lines. If a proposal claims big debt reduction while leaving the largest categories almost untouched, the plan is usually short on arithmetic.

What “structural” change means

One-time actions can raise cash once. Structural actions change the path of spending or revenue year after year. Debt falls on structural shifts. One-offs can help at the margin, but they don’t change the trend.

Table 1: The main levers that can bend the debt line

Lever How it cuts deficits Trade-off to weigh
Benefit formula adjustments Slows growth in large entitlement outlays over many years Distribution effects by income and age
Eligibility rule changes Shifts when benefits start or who qualifies Harder for workers in demanding jobs
Health payment reforms Reduces cost growth by changing incentives, fraud control, pricing rules Access risks if cuts are blunt
Discretionary caps with priorities Holds annual appropriations growth down Pressure on defense, research, and services
Tax base broadening Raises revenue by trimming exclusions and deductions Pushback from affected groups
Rate changes Raises revenue from higher marginal rates or surcharges Work and investment response at the margin
New broad-based taxes Creates steady revenue with a wide base Household burden unless paired with credits
Tax administration upgrades Raises compliance and shrinks the tax gap Privacy and due-process safeguards needed
Budget rules and triggers Prevents backsliding when targets are missed Can be blunt if poorly designed

What the nonpartisan scorekeepers are saying

The best way to avoid wishful thinking is to lean on neutral scoring. CBO publishes long-range projections under current law and shows how debt and interest costs evolve if policy stays on its present track. CBO’s long-term budget outlook (2025–2055) lays out the scale of the mismatch between spending growth and revenue.

These projections are not destiny. They are a yardstick. They show that stabilizing debt takes sustained deficit reduction.

CBO is not the only neutral referee. GAO also tracks debt and interest pressures in “The Nation’s Fiscal Health: Strategy Needed as Debt Levels Accelerate”, with a focus on how rising interest narrows budget choices.

Spending choices that can shrink debt

If the goal is debt reduction, the math points toward the biggest categories. A few design patterns show up in plans that budget analysts take seriously.

Use gradual rules, then protect the most exposed

Benefit changes that phase in over many years can reduce outlays while giving people time to adapt. Plans often pair that with protections for low-income retirees, disabled beneficiaries, and people close to retirement age. Those protections reduce hardship and can help a plan last.

Target health-cost growth, not just dollar cuts

Health spending is a core driver of long-run federal outlays. Savings can come from paying for outcomes rather than volume, stronger fraud controls, pricing changes, and better care coordination. The more a plan depends on a blunt across-the-board cut, the more likely it is to shift costs to patients or states rather than reduce total costs.

Match discretionary budgets to stated priorities

For programs funded through annual appropriations, caps can work when lawmakers set clear priorities inside the cap. A cap that forces every program to shrink by the same share can break quickly. A cap that funds some things more and others less can hold longer, but it demands open trade-offs.

Revenue choices that raise cash without wrecking incentives

Revenue is the other side of the ledger. Mixed packages tend to have a better shot than one-sided plans.

Broaden the base before chasing only rates

Base-broadening means trimming exclusions, deductions, and credits that narrow the tax base. That can raise revenue while keeping statutory rates lower than they would be otherwise. It also reduces the reward for tax planning that shifts income into favored categories.

Strengthen compliance with clear guardrails

Tax administration upgrades can raise revenue by narrowing underpayment. The payoff depends on execution: steady funding, better data systems, good customer service, and rules that respect due process. Enforcement that looks arbitrary can backfire.

Growth that helps, with no fairy tales

Growth can make debt reduction less painful, but claims that growth alone will erase large deficits deserve skepticism. Favor policies with clear payback and clear budget offsets.

Table 2: Quick checks that separate solid plans from slogans

Check What to look for Red flag
Debt ratio Debt-to-GDP flattens, then trends down Debt keeps rising in every year shown
Primary balance Primary deficit shrinks, then turns to surplus in normal years Savings rely only on “assume lower rates”
Start dates Major savings start soon or have enforceable phase-ins Big savings begin after the scoring window
Enforcement Caps, triggers, or pay-as-you-go rules back the promises No backstop if targets are missed
Distribution Clear tables on who pays more and who gets less Vague language with no numbers by group
Implementation Agencies have funding and authority to execute Program changes with no admin capacity
Independent score Neutral analysts agree the plan hits its target Only self-scored claims

Shortcuts that rarely cut debt

Some ideas keep returning because they sound painless. Most don’t change the debt trend.

One-time asset sales

Asset sales can raise cash once. Unless the proceeds are paired with structural deficit reduction, debt tends to keep rising afterward.

Timing shifts

Moving payments across fiscal years can make a budget window look better while changing little in the long run. If the “savings” line has no policy mechanism behind it, treat it as a placeholder.

Relying on surprise inflation

Inflation can reduce the real value of fixed-rate debt, but it also lifts borrowing costs and can damage trust. Betting on inflation is a gamble, not a plan.

A simple way to pressure-test any proposal in five minutes

When you see a new debt plan, run this quick test.

  1. Ask for the baseline. What happens to deficits and debt under current law?
  2. Find the big buckets. Where do the largest savings or revenues come from?
  3. Check the mechanism. Is each savings line tied to a real policy change?
  4. Check enforcement. What forces the plan to stay on track if politics shift?
  5. Look for an outside score. Does CBO or another neutral scorer back the claim?

If you want a longer historical view of debt totals, Treasury’s Historical Debt Outstanding dataset shows end-of-fiscal-year figures across U.S. history. It helps you see when debt fell after major events and what patterns were present during those periods.

The checklist to keep

Debt reduction is not a single bill. It’s a stretch of years where outcomes match the promises. Use this checklist as your filter:

  • Debt-to-GDP flattens, then falls.
  • The primary deficit shrinks, then turns into a primary surplus in normal years.
  • Rules and triggers reduce backsliding.
  • Independent scoring backs the claims.

References & Sources