The 100% debt trap: Why the IMF’s latest warning is a massive long-term signal for bitcoin
The IMF warns that global public debt could reach about 100% of world GDP by 2029.
What to know:
- The IMF warns that global public debt could reach about 100% of world GDP by 2029, raising doubts about governments’ fiscal solvency and bond markets’ stability.
- In a scenario where debt outpaces growth and bond yields rise on solvency fears rather than central bank tightening, investors may seek alternatives outside traditional finance, including bitcoin.
- Bitcoin’s capped supply, independence from sovereign balance sheets and past performance during banking crises bolster its appeal as a potential long-term hedge against mounting public debt and financial repression.
In other words, by 2029, debt load will have grown to consume the entire global economic output, leaving nothing for additional investments in the economy or in non-economic but socially important causes. Per the IMF, China and the U.S. will continue to drive debt higher, with contributions from a broad swathe of nations as defense spending surges globally.
If annual economic growth is equal to or falls short of the debt raised by issuing government bonds, markets could start questioning the fiscal solvency of sovereigns and thereby demand a higher return (bond yield) for lending to governments.
That’s precisely a scenario in which an asset like bitcoin could stand out. Decentralized, censorship-resistant and beholden to no government or central bank, bitcoin sits entirely outside the the architecture of traditional finance (TradFi).
