The Boy Who Cried Fiscal Crisis
Dave Ramsey has heard it all before. The economic apocalypse. The debt bomb. The inevitable collapse. And he's over it.
"I've observed people in my world write books about the economic end of the world," the personal finance expert told comedian Theo Von last year. "And they keep being wrong, so I don't want to write that book."
Ramsey himself used to worry about the mounting national debt back in his 20s. But after decades of watching predictions fail to materialize, he's changed his tune. "Is it concerning? Yeah, it's concerning. But is it going to cause a crash? Apparently not," he said.
That doesn't mean he thinks the debt is harmless. Rather than triggering some dramatic meltdown, Ramsey argues it works more like a slow leak. Government borrowing crowds out private investment because Treasury bonds absorb capital that businesses might otherwise use. "It's stealing money from the economy in that sense," he explained.
Others See the Crisis Already Unfolding
Not everyone shares Ramsey's measured outlook. Since that interview aired, the national debt has ballooned another $2 trillion to reach $38 trillion.
"You feel a little bit like Paul Revere—except instead of the British coming, the crisis is coming," former Council on Foreign Relations president and veteran diplomat Richard Haass told Fortune recently.
Haass views the debt as a legitimate national security threat. The United States spent over $1 trillion on interest payments last year—more than the entire military budget. That's money that can't fund defense, infrastructure, or anything else. He warns the debt constrains America's foreign policy options and creates vulnerability if investors lose confidence or geopolitical rivals like China decide to "weaponize its Treasuries."
In Haass's view, there are two scenarios ahead: either a sudden crisis triggered by market panic, or a continued slow squeeze that gradually diminishes U.S. influence globally. "You don't need a bond market collapse to have a crisis," he noted.
The Paralysis Problem
Barry Eichengreen, a professor of economics and political science at the University of California, Berkeley, identifies a different core issue: Washington simply can't function anymore.
"Political polarization is higher in the United States than in any other advanced country for which we have comparable data," he told Fortune recently. "It is deeply debilitating in terms of our ability to achieve consensus and stability and productive policy results."
Previous debt reduction efforts succeeded through bipartisan cooperation—something that no longer exists in today's political environment. Neither party wants to touch Social Security or Medicare. Neither wants to raise taxes. Even the Trump-Musk Department of Government Efficiency program didn't deliver meaningful results.
What It Actually Means
Despite their different perspectives, Ramsey, Haass, and Eichengreen all agree the debt carries real consequences. Whether it's siphoning away investment capital, limiting America's global reach, or consuming future budgets with interest payments, that $38 trillion figure matters.
Still, Ramsey maintains confidence in long-term market investing. "I do think it's still a safe place for people to invest. I've got millions and millions of dollars in mutual funds," he said.
The question isn't really whether the national debt matters. It's whether the damage happens all at once or bit by bit—and whether anyone in Washington can muster the political will to do anything about it before the answer becomes painfully obvious.