This paper clarifies a common misconception in public discussions of U.S. fiscal policy: the belief that the national debt is equivalent to money printing. It demonstrates that Treasury debt issuance is a borrowing operation, not a monetary expansion mechanism, and that the majority of U.S. debt represents domestic lending relationships among American citizens, institutions, and the federal government. The analysis distinguishes between Treasury borrowing and Federal Reserve money creation, explains the circular flow of domestic credit, and examines the role of foreign holders. By reframing the national debt as an internal credit system rather than a form of monetary creation, the paper provides a clearer foundation for evaluating fiscal policy, economic stability, and the distribution of financial obligations within the United States.
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Florin Horicianu
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Florin Horicianu (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37acab34aaaeb1a67cb3f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19197833