tranquilium
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You didn't see the video clearly. That is total debt, including household, corporate etc.
Chinese public debt is actually very low by International Standards.
@Hu Songshan @Deino
This person has been repeatedly warned not only for his trolling, and slandering. I think action should be taken for repeated slander and name calling.
How does the US debt sum upto 814% of GDP?
The state debt figures that you have given me are measured relative to the GDP of the state. That is if the state GDP is a trillion dollars, and the debt is 50%, this gives the net debt as 0.5 trillion.
Hence, the net debt as a fraction of total GDP would be even lower.
You have made the mistake of adding up all the debt to GDP ratios, when you should have taken a weighted mean, weighted by the respective GDP figures of each state.
The reason US debt sum up to 814%, as seen here:
State Debt Ranking Percent GDP for 2016 - Charts
Total US debt soars to nearly $60 trn, foreshadows new recession — RT USA
The numbers are somewhat different depending on the method of analysis, depending on what is supposed counted in "total debt" and method of statistics, but the message is quite clear.
Basically, as I have stated before, debt, especially corporate debt, is a normal part of business operation. I have linked my post in my previous reply to you in the other thread, so I won't bother to do it again. The gist is that for an advanced economy is expected for corporation and local government to take on quite a bit debt----because these debts are by-product of the normal social development and in the long run beneficial to the development of the society as a whole. As oppose to public debt which is pretty purely deficit and not beneficial.
This is why I am upset with your obsession with this idea of "total debt". Articles and video harping on total debt (and not surprisingly, they only seem to talk about China instead of the much bigger US total debt) are typically taking advantage of people's ignorance of what total debt actual is and you are helping to propagate the ignorance.
This is only the data until 2008 and you see how the number goes. I'm not sure it will go to 800%, but not low.
View attachment 266376
That graph is actually missing the state and local level government debt. The government debt there only include the federal debt, ie, public debt. 800% is probably one of the harsher estimates, but it is not that far off.