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MCPO Roger Collins
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Wouldn't be the first time and we seem to always recover. We, as a nation would fine, although many citizens would be in crisis, since all those dollars we have invested in a variety of monetary instruments would crushed, along with those getting all the welfare checks of any kind.

United States (1779 (devaluation of Continental Dollar), 1790, 1798 (see The Quasi-war), 1862,[7] 1933 (see Executive Order 6102),[1] 1971 (Nixon Shock) nine states (1841–1842)[1]
10 states and many local governments (1873–83 or 1884)[1]
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Capt Richard I P.
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With enormous national debts there are only 4 potential outcomes long term: 1. Repudiation/negotiated partial payments backed by threat of repudiation (as mentioned here) 2. Hyper inflation to pay face value without paying real value 3. Tough, painful political choices often reneging on promises to citizens (Like Social Security Medicaid Medicare, enormous tax increases) 4. Collapse. The trick is 1 and 2 normally lead to 4. And everyone hopes they can just avoid 3 by kicking the can down the road until they leave office or die and someone else has to deal with it.
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CPT Jack Durish
CPT Jack Durish
8 y
There is a fifth outcome that you failed to include (probably because of the fact that chances of it are remote): We the People elect responsible representatives at every level and branch of government who seriously reduce the size of govt and govt spending, thus allowing us to create new wealth in excess of our debt.
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SPC James Harsh
SPC James Harsh
8 y
Not sure if this was covered and has been in practice before when a nation is awarded money and expected to repay where as the lender may not fully expect the repayment. Eventually the debtor nation would sacrifice national resources to fund the bill
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