Just How Much is $13 Trillion?

by Cord Blomquist on February 12, 2009 · 7 comments

in Bailout Watch, Economy, Features, Stimulus to Nowhere, Zeitgeist

Regardless of your political party or ideological leanings, the notion of the federal government spending $2 trillion, adding to the national debt of nearly $11 trillion already, should make you stop and consider the staggering size of our national tab.

If the irony of using debt-based spending to solve a problem caused by debt-based spending has escaped you, perhaps these fun facts will put things into perspective:

  • If you spent $1 every second, you’d have to keep spending for 412,000 years to get to $13 trillion.  That means you’d have to start shortly after the time human beings first starting using stone tools and fire to get to $13 trillion today.
  • $13 trillion in one dollar bills weighs 28 million pounds.  That’s as much as 87 blue whales or 462 Statues of Liberty.
  • If you laid 13 trillion one-dollar bills end-to-end they’d reach from the earth to the sun and back…five times over.  That’s 946 million miles of greenbacks.

The amount we’re looking at now—roughly $2 trillion between the Secretary Geithner’s new bank bailout plan  and President Obama’s stimulus package—isn’t small potatoes either.  So what is $2 trillion?

  • $2 trillion is bigger than the entire Gross Domestic Product of our neighbor to the north, Canada.  In fact, according to the IMF, only Japan, Germany, China, the United Kingdom, France, and Italy have bigger total economies than the combined bailout/stimulus plan—all other countries on Earth have economies smaller than $2 trillion per year.

Then there’s the interest on this staggering debt, which isn’t exactly small.  Paying the interest on the current $10.7 trillion debt cost Americans $451.1 billion last year alone.  How big is that?

  • That’s $1478 dollars in interest for every man, woman, and child in the United States.
  • That’s bigger than the annual budgets of  New York ($121.1 billion), California ($111.1 billion) and Texas ($83.8 billion) combined.

If you’re scared, upset, or disgusted by this, you can do something.  Visit BeyondBailouts.org and tell your Congressman and the President what you think of the bank bailout and stimulus.

You can also click on the “ShareThis” button at the top of this post to forward these fun facts to your friends or share them on your favorite social network.

Correction: I originally listed the state budget of Texas as $167 billion, but that figure was not annual.  Texas budgets for two years at a time, so the figure has been cut in half.

{ 5 comments }

Learn Selling February 22, 2009 at 3:57 am

wow it is enough to eliminate poverty! HAHA i think

David Reeves March 5, 2009 at 4:11 am

Here's a way to estimate how much a Trillion dollars of federal spending will cost the average taxpaying household: There are almost 100 million households in the country. Assuming that about half of the households pay taxes, each Trillion dollars of federal spending will cost the average US household $ 20,000; so the proposed eight(8) Trillion dollars in bailout/"stimulus" money will cost the average household $ 160,000 !

How much is one Trillion? One Million pencils side by side makes four miles; about an hour's walk for a fast walker. A Billion pencils would be a 40-year walk. A Trillion pencils…a 100-year walk.

David Reeves March 5, 2009 at 4:25 am

How much is a Trillion? A Million pencils laid side by side is four miles, about an hour's walk; a Billion pencils is a walk of 40+ years; a Trillion pencils is a walk of over 100 years.

One way to calculate the household cost of a Trillion federal spending: Our country has about 100 Million households. Assuming about half of the households pay any significant federal taxes, those households will have to pay $ 20,000 for each Trillion dollars in federal spending. $ 13 Trillion in spending will cost the average household $ 260,000. If that $ 260,000 isn't paid back by our taxes, inflation will be rampant and/or the US dollar will become almost valueless in the global market, causing devastating worldwide financial turmoil.

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