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My Take | US, heal thy fiscal health first for the sake of the global economy

  • American lawmakers cannot or will not deal with their nation’s own multitrillion-dollar debt problem, so they complain about China’s

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TV screens show US President Joe Biden and Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump. Photo: Reuters

The International Monetary Fund has issued a statement urging the United States to “urgently” address its mounting fiscal burden and called on its leaders to raise taxes to plug the gap.

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This came after the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) projected that US debt is on course to hit US$56 trillion in a decade.

The country is currently more than US$34 trillion in debt, which is equal to 99 per cent of its entire gross domestic product.

So, what did some US lawmakers do? They convened a meeting warning against China’s multitrillion-dollar local government debt.

Apparently the House Oversight committee wanted to call attention to China’s property market downturn and the risk it and opaque financing vehicles carried by local governments posed to the Chinese and world economies.
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Never mind Beijing deliberately bursting the property bubble and crushing the most heavily indebted private developers, rather than kicking the can down the road.

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