Fortune Report Claims US Govt 'Insolvent' With $41.7T Deficit

Is the U.S. government truly insolvent or is that an overstated alarm masking a serious but manageable fiscal crisis?
Fortune Report Claims US Govt 'Insolvent' With $41.7T Deficit
Above: U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent testifies before a committee at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Feb. 5. Image credit: Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images

The Spin


Establishment-critical narrative

Without so much as a peep from the media, the U.S. government is flat-out insolvent. Treasury's own numbers show $6.06 trillion in assets against $47.78 trillion in liabilities, a negative $41.72 trillion balance sheet. Tack on $88.4 trillion in unfunded Social Security and Medicare obligations and total federal commitments balloon past $136 trillion. Congress has lost control and a constitutional debt brake is the only real fix.

Pro-establishment narrative

Calling the U.S. "insolvent" is an interpretive leap, not an official Treasury verdict — governments hold taxation authority and monetary sovereignty that no private firm possesses. The fiscal trajectory is genuinely unsustainable, but precision matters because Treasury published a report, not a declaration of insolvency. Overstating the diagnosis undermines the credibility of an alarm that is already serious enough on its own merits.


Metaculus Prediction


The Controversies


© 2026 Improve the News Foundation. All rights reserved.Version 7.2.1

© 2026 Improve the News Foundation.

All rights reserved.

Version 7.2.1