Gas at $4 a gallon makes the news. But the $1 trillion interest bill behind it doesn't.
That bill is what limits what the government can do next. And it's the reason this cycle won't end the way past ones did.
Interest Now Tops Defense Spending
The U.S. spends $88 billion a month on interest on its debt. That's more than it spends on the military or on schools.
Interest is the second-biggest line in the budget, right behind Social Security. It's up about 7% from last year and on pace to top $1 trillion in 2026.
The 1970s gap: Back then, the government could raise rates to 20% and crush prices. Debt sat at just 35% of GDP, so the budget could take the hit.
Today debt sits above 120% of GDP. About $10 trillion is rolling over at higher rates this year alone.
The CBO projects interest costs of $2.1 trillion a year by 2036. Raising rates from here would only make that bill grow faster.
That's why the push stays in one direction. Lower rates and a weaker dollar are the only path the budget allows.
The 1970s playbook called for higher rates to crush prices. But that tool breaks when the debt is this large.
Every point higher on $39 trillion adds about $100 billion a year in costs. The math rules out the old fix.
How Rising Prices Move Money From Savers to Borrowers
Rising prices move money from savers to borrowers every day. Cash holders lose buying power while homeowners with fixed loans gain it.
The government gains the most from this shift. Every point of price growth chips away at the real cost of $39 trillion in debt.
A $100,000 savings account loses about $1,000 a year at 3% price growth. Over a decade, that adds up to more than $25,000 gone.
The balance on the screen stays the same through all of it. But the real value behind it drops month after month.
Central banks see the same trend and are acting on it. They bought 863 tonnes of gold in 2025 - nearly twice the pre-2022 pace, even after cooling from three straight years above 1,000 tonnes.
The dollar's share of global reserves dropped from 71% in 1999 to about 56% today. That decline has held for years.
The shift isn't just about gold. Central banks are also moving into yuan and other assets outside the dollar.
Worth Noting
Stocks, real estate, gold, and bonds tied to prices have beaten cash in every past high-debt cycle. Cash looks safe but costs about $8,900 in buying power per $100,000 held.
The same math plays out every time debt is high and prices are rising. Cash falls behind while real assets keep up.
The oil shock grabbed the front page. But the interest bill is what drives what happens from here.
The dollar has lost 97% of its value since 1913. The trend runs in one way - and nothing in the budget points to a turn.
The numbers are all public and the math is plain. The only thing that varies is who acts on it - and when.
