I was just wondering how the US (or any country really) can pull out 100 billion on a given occasion ? Is the treasury just “printing” more money, or are taxes raised? (let’s say 200million Americans are active, that’s still $500 per person. Or is it just debt passed on to future generations? It goes without saying that I am not fluent in finance
There are three ways governments obtain money.
- Taxes
- Borrow Money
- Print Money
The US government does all three. In this particular case, it’s likely just borrowing money.
The biggest thing people don’t understand about this is that governments don’t borrow money like people do. Borrowing money today has the potential to increase tax revenue tomorrow if spent on the right things, which covers part (or all) of the cost.
The US government isn’t just shipping $100 billion in cash to these countries. They’re mostly paying American companies to send products or provide services to Ukraine and Israel. Those spent dollars have an economic effect inside the country, stimulating the economy.
Will that make up for the cost? Probably not, but it’s also not as bad as the number sounds and it keeps certain industries well stocked and ready in case the US government needs them if a global conflict escalates to where the US needs to get directly involved.
xmunk@sh.itjust.works 7 months ago
Governments need to do things, sometimes expensive things, so generally all the debt capacity and revenue (i.e. taxes) goes into a big bucket and we spend out of that. So the real answer for you is “some vague combination of debt and revenue” that is, admittedly, an extremely unsatisfying answer, but it’s accurate.
If you’re curious what our debt capacity is… well, there’s no answer to that. So long as we’re spending money in a way that we’ll get a return over interest (in this case, funding Ukraine can be measured against fighting Russia ourselves but it’s vague and hard to quantify) then debt is totally fine… when we start diverting a large portion of our revenue and debt to issue kickbacks (outlandish military contractors, unproductive tax cuts, political favor currying) that’s when we get into trouble.
IMO, and this is highly subjective, our expenditures to defend Ukraine are pretty clear budgetary wins.