In a newly released analysis, Goldman Sachs has issued a sharp warning: Donald Trump’s proposed budget is unlikely to prevent the U.S. from entering a dangerous era of debt accumulation, with projections nearing levels not seen since World War II.
The Wall Street firm’s economists argue that even with optimistic assumptions about growth, Trump’s spending proposals would still push the federal debt-to-GDP ratio past 119% by the early 2030s. That figure would surpass pandemic-era highs and approach levels only matched during wartime mobilization in the 1940s.
A Debt Spiral Years in the Making
The U.S. national debt currently exceeds $34 trillion. Under Trump’s latest plan, Goldman Sachs projects annual deficits will remain near or above $1.5 trillion for the next decade. The bank’s concern isn’t rooted in ideology, but in arithmetic.
“There is no clear path to debt stabilization in this plan,” Goldman’s chief economist Jan Hatzius noted. “Absent major entitlement reforms or tax increases, debt will keep growing faster than the economy.”
Even Trump’s promises of economic growth and tax-driven stimulus, the firm says, are unlikely to outweigh the pressures of rising interest payments and an aging population.
The WWII Parallel, And Its Limits
While debt spiked during World War II, the post-war years saw the U.S. rapidly pay down obligations thanks to a booming economy, strong demographics, and suppressed interest rates. Today’s conditions are starkly different.
“With higher interest rates and slower growth, this is a peacetime debt buildup without the post-war payoff,” said one Goldman analyst. “It’s more like chronic illness than an acute emergency.”
Key Drivers: Interest, Entitlements, and Political Gridlock
Trump’s budget proposal pledges to protect Social Security and Medicare while boosting military spending and infrastructure investments. Combined with extended tax cuts from his first term, this leaves few levers to slow down the debt machine.
Interest payments are another growing threat. In just a few years, the U.S. will spend more on interest than it does on the military, according to Treasury projections. And Goldman estimates that by 2030, interest alone could consume more than 3.5% of GDP annually.
Economic Confidence on the Line
As mentioned by Millionaire MNL, the real risk may not be an immediate crisis—but a slow erosion of investor confidence. If global buyers of U.S. debt start demanding higher returns, or doubt America’s fiscal resolve, the cost of borrowing could spike dramatically.
“If the U.S. loses its perceived creditworthiness,” the report states, “the consequences would be systemic—across equities, housing, and employment.”
While Trump continues to frame his budget as a pro-growth reset, Goldman Sachs, and many in the financial sector, see it as a short-term political strategy at odds with long-term fiscal reality.