John Schmid:

Tax rates could double. Spending on education, research, health and even Social Security could be squeezed tighter than ever. And foreign governments could use powerful financial leverage, rather than military force, to impose their economic and political agendas on the United States.
All because the U.S. national debt – which is being financed on a daily basis by the governments of China and a host of oil-exporting states, among others – has made this country far more vulnerable than its elected leaders let on, says David Walker, who recently finished a 10-year stint as U.S. comptroller general and head of the Government Accountability Office.
The nation’s former auditor-in-chief will outline this crisis scenario today in Milwaukee, when he and an entourage of like-minded Washington policy analysts make their latest stop on Walker’s Fiscal Wake-Up Tour.
Foreign governments and investors now hold fully half of the United States’ total outstanding debt, making Washington susceptible to a new form of geopolitical conflict that Walker calls “financial warfare.”

Related: