It's bookkeeping semantics .. the biggest lender to the US government ahead of Japan, which is ahead of China, is the US government.
Some might describe this as:
Intragovernmental debt records a transfer from one part of the government to another, and therefore has no net effect on the government’s overall finances. As of December 2023, intragovernmental debt totaled $7.0 trillion, a $2.0 trillion increase from a decade ago. In almost all cases, such debt is held in government trust funds — accounting mechanisms to track money designated for a specific purpose or program.
The largest holder of intragovernmental debt is the Social Security Old-Age and Survivors Insurance Trust Fund, which holds about $2.6 trillion, or 38 percent of intragovernmental debt. Other accounts holding such debt include retirement funds for federal employees, Medicare’s Hospital Insurance Trust Fund, and the Highway Trust Fund.
nabla9|1 year ago
Only 22% of US government debt is owned by foreign countries. Most of the debt is domestic.
defrost|1 year ago
Some might describe this as:
~ https://www.pgpf.org/article/the-federal-government-has-borr...Another description of the US debt is: https://usafacts.org/articles/which-countries-own-the-most-u...
And there are other takes.
It's accurate in a sense to rate Japan and China as the largest non US Gov. lenders to the US Gov.
This is a rabbit hole of definitions and viewpoints.