1. What is the "debt held by the public"?
The Debt Held by the Public is all federal debt held by individuals, corporations, state or local governments, foreign governments, and other entities outside the United States Government less Federal Financing Bank securities. Types of securities held by the public include, but are not limited to, Treasury Bills, Notes, Bonds, TIPS, United States Savings Bonds, and State and Local Government Series securities.
http://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/resources/faq/faq_publicdebt.htm#DebtOwnerThis gets confusing, because what this federal reserve source calls "debt held by the public" overlaps with what this other federal reserve source:
http://www.frbsf.org/education/activities/drecon/answerxml.cfm?selectedurl=/2005/0507.htmlcalls "private debt".
In the linked 2005 article above the author talks about "public debt" (= total US debt), Fed & government accounts (= roughly: intragovernmental holdings) & "private debt" (= roughly "debt held by the public).
So, keeping in mind the "roughly" part, let's look at the "private" debt (the "debt held by the public") in June 2009 under "Ownership of Federal Securities" here:
http://www.fms.treas.gov/bulletin/index.htmlIn June 2009, we have Total government debt of $11.5 trillion, of which Federal Reserve & Intragovernmental holdings = $5 trillion.
Total Privately Held Debt is $6.5 trillion. Of that:
- $0.14 trillion held by Depository institutions (inc commercial & savings banks & credit unions)
- $0.19 trillion held by US Savings Bond holders
- $0.48 trillion held in Pension funds as follows:
---- Private: $0.31 trillion
---- State & local gov't: $0.18 trillion
- $0.16 trillion held by Insurance companies
- $0.69 trillion held by Mutual funds
- $0.53 trillion held by State & local governments
Subtotal Domestic Private = $2.2 trillion.
Then we have $3.3 trillion held by Foreign/International individuals & institutions. Who held this category of debt in 2005?
"Most of the world’s official reserves are held in U.S. dollars. Also, because of its relative safety, foreign investors (both government and private) may choose to hold assets denominated in dollars, such as U.S. Treasury securities... Central banks or other monetary authorities... may hold foreign exchange reserves—such as dollars—in order to influence the value of their domestic currency...
The Office of Management and Budget states that, at the end of 2005, “
oreign central banks owned 63 percent of the Federal debt held by foreign residents; private investors owned nearly all the rest”. The official foreign holdings of specific countries is a “well-guarded secret,” but overall foreign holdings (that is, official foreign holdings plus holdings from private foreign investors) are tracked by the Treasury, and are displayed in Chart 3."
So, assuming the same ratio still holds, approximately 37% of our foreign debt ($1.2 trillion) is held by individual investors.
In addition, these "foreign" investors aren't necessarily non-Americans. Notice that 3% of "foreign" holdings are in the Cayman Islands, notorious for offshore, tax-free accounts for corporations & the wealthy. Undoubtably the large "other" category contains some of this as well.
Also notice the "foreign" category has been growing as a % of total private debt:
The final category of "private debt" is not specified as domestic or foreign. It is "other private investors", holding $0.92 trillion in securities. This category includes holdings of individuals, Government-sponsored enterprises, brokers and dealers, bank personal trusts and estates, corporate and non-corporate businesses, and still "other investors".
To what extent the private "debt held by the public" accrues to the very wealthy v. the ordinary joe would take more detailed analysis. However, I note the following:
(Rounded), The top 1% of Americans owns:
62% of business equity
61% of financial securities
39% of trusts
38% of stocks & mutual funds
20% of deposits
14% of pension accounts
22% of life insurance
28% of non-home real estate & 9% of principal residences
The next 9% owns the majority of what's left.
http://sociology.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html
I also note that "private" debt has been growing as a percent of total US debt. In 2005 "private" debt was 48.5% of total debt; in June 2009 it was 56.5%, & this month it is 63%.
Have private "investors" been moving into government "investments" as a safe haven following the crash, expecting the government to make their losses elsewhere whole? I don't know, however, IMO based on the information here:
If cuts are proposed to Social Security, Medicare & Medicaid, it's mainly to pay off the "investments" of the wealthy on the people's dime, & at the cost of the people's security & health.