How states and great powers typically deal with high debt

Historically, there are only four real paths. It’s always about shifting losses — the question is who pays.

1. Growth (the cleanest, but hardest)

  • The economy grows faster than debt
  • Debt shrinks relative to GDP
  • Rare, requires productivity, innovation, stability

Examples: USA after WWII, Germany after 1950

Reality: today almost impossible without additional tools

2. Inflation (the most commonly used)

  • Debt stays the same in nominal terms
  • Purchasing power falls → debt is “inflated away”
  • A hidden tax on savers and the middle class

Used when:

  • debt is in the domestic currency
  • the central bank cooperates with the state

Examples:
1970s USA, post-war Europe, today’s USA/EU

Inflation is politically the least painful — people don’t understand it immediately.

3. Financial repression

  • Artificially low interest rates
  • Forced purchases of government bonds (banks, funds)
  • Capital controls, regulations, taxes, withdrawal limits

Effect:
negative real yields → creditors pay debtors

Examples:
USA 1945–1980, Japan long-term, EU indirectly

4. Default / restructuring

  • Partial debt write-offs
  • Extended maturities
  • Lower interest rates

Used when denial is no longer possible

Examples:
Greece 2012, Argentina repeatedly, Russia 1998

5. War (an extreme reset)

  • Physical destruction = economic reset
  • Debts erased via inflation, default, or a new order

Historically common, politically unpopular today — but not impossible

How high household debt is dealt with

Households have fewer options than states. Typical scenarios:

A. Inflation + wages (soft scenario)

  • Real wages rise
  • Debts remain nominally the same
  • Installments “hurt less”

Works only if:

  • loans have fixed interest rates
  • incomes grow at least as fast as inflation

B. Refinancing / extending maturities

  • Longer repayment periods
  • Lower monthly payments
  • Higher total interest paid

Very common
Politically safe

C. Bankruptcy / personal debt relief

  • Part of the debt written off
  • Loss of assets and credit score
  • Social and psychological costs

Used en masse during crises
USA 2008–2012

D. Selling assets

  • Real estate, investments
  • Reduced consumption
  • Economy-wide deleveraging

Leads to crises
(deflationary pressure)

E. Moral hazard (politics)

  • State rescues debtors
  • Partial debt forgiveness
  • Losses transferred to taxpayers

Examples:
mortgage moratoria, COVID measures

Summary

Debts are never resolved without pain.
The pain is only shifted.

  • Inflation → savers
  • Taxes → workers
  • Default → creditors
  • Recession → employees
  • Financial repression → pension funds

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