Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Just how much is a trillion dollars?

What's a trillion dollars?

A trillion dollars = $1,000,000,000,000.

That's 12 zeroes to the left of the decimal point. A trillion is a million million dollars.

The U.S. government spends more than the entire Gross Domestic Product (GDP) of Australia, China and Spain combined. If you laid one dollar bills end to end, you could make a chain that stretches from earth to the moon and back again 200 times before you ran out of dollar bills! One trillion dollars would stretch nearly from the earth to the sun. It would take a military jet flying at the speed of sound, reeling out a roll of dollar bills behind it, 14 years before it reeled out one trillion dollar bills.

What is frightening is that government will continue to grow in America unless citizens prevent it. If government stays on the course it's been on for the past forty years without a radical change, the federal government will have a $10 TRILLION BUDGET by the year 2010.

Foolish politicians make pronouncements about the strength of the economy. The total debt obligation of the United States now exceeds 46 TRILLION DOLLARS.

American workers now net almost 30 percent less in real wages than they did in 1973. After taxes, two paychecks in a family barely equal the purchasing power one had thirty years ago.

The population of the U.S. is 303,824,640 (2008). Of that population, 16.5% are gainfully employed in civilian employment = 50,131,065. If we gave each gainfully employed person a million dollars, it would cost us $50,131,065,600,000. That's $50 trillion. Our national debt of $46 trillion is almost there.

If you had started spending one million dollars per day when Jesus was born, and continued every day until now, you are still short of one trillion dollars.

Now, some are talking about a $2 trillion stimulus package. If we just gave the $2 trillion to the working Americans, each would receive approximately $40,000. That would fix most mortgages, and maybe even allow most families to trade cars as well. Everybody gets fixed.

That isn't going to happen. Which raises the question, where will most of the $2 trillion end up?

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