outside the
IRS office in
New York City, 2012 There is more debt in the world than there is money in circulation. The ratio of total debt to
money supply ranges from 1.7 in
Japan and
Switzerland to 4.7 in
Denmark and
Iceland. The ratio for the world total is 1.8, according to the above table. A high ratio of public debt to money cannot be sustained, according to some models. Economists prefer to look at the
ratio of debt to the GDP. This ratio ranges from 1.5 in
Latvia to 5.0 in
Luxembourg. The world total is 3.5, according to the
Institute of International Finance. The reason why there is more debt than money in circulation can be explained by the
creation of credit money. When a bank issues a loan, it creates
credit money and debt at the same time. The total debt in society and the total money in circulation are both increased by the same amount, which is the
principal of the loan. By the time the loan has to be paid back, the debt has been increased by the
compound interest while the credit money has not been increased. Most of the excess debt thus originates from compound interest of bank credit. It may seem impossible to repay all debt when there is more debt than money in the world, but it is theoretically possible to pay back all debt if the banks spend their income from interest payments to buy products and services so that the same money can
circulate and be reused for more interest payments. However, critics fear that too much money is
hoarded in the
financial economy rather than spent in the
real economy so that the total debt is spiraling up rather than being paid down. In fact, the global debt has grown by approximately 6% per year during the period from 2015 to 2021. A further reason why this is unrealistic is, as
environmentalists argue, that perpetual growth on a finite planet is
not sustainable. The debt may be undermined if the
inflation rate exceeds the interest rate, but inflation also raises the prices of
real estate and other
assets, resulting in more new debt to finance housing costs. The fast growing debt is a consequence of the current
financial system that leads to an unbalanced and uncontrolled growth of money and debt. There is a distorted balance between public and private interests with insufficient democratic accountability, according to a
Dutch government report. == Consequences of high external debt ==