TL;DR
- Bessent’s Treasury is borrowing at a clip that makes net interest the fastest-growing federal bill, now bigger than year‑to‑date defense outlays—and taxpayers are already footing it [2].
- The real squeeze isn’t “debt apocalypse”; it’s financing mechanics: coupon sizes are frozen into 2026, pushing a refinancing wave into 2027 when rates may still be sticky [3][4].
- Back‑of‑envelope: if 9‑month net interest is $857B, FY2026 likely tops ~$1.14T—about $8.5K per U.S. household—before any new programs, tax cuts, or wars enter the chat [2][10].
What the source said
TheStreet’s piece argues the “troubling news for every taxpayer” is the interest bill itself and points to the CBO’s June 2026 Monthly Budget Review showing a $1.4 trillion deficit for the first nine months of the fiscal year and $857 billion in net interest, roughly $23.8 billion a week and up 13% year over year [1][2]. It notes that total federal debt is near $39.4 trillion and that year‑to‑date net interest has surpassed defense spending in the same period [1][2]. The article references CRFB’s warning that full‑year borrowing could exceed $2 trillion and cites longer‑term CBO projections showing interest costs roughly doubling by 2036, with Social Security’s OASI trust fund projected to hit insolvency in 2032 if laws remain unchanged [1][7][8].
Why it matters
Stakeholders aren’t abstract “taxpayers”; they’re workers whose FICA payroll taxes fund Medicare and Social Security, retirees whose checks depend on the OASI and DI trust funds, and households facing higher “interest taxes” in the form of rising federal carry costs each year [2][8]. The CBO ledger for FY2026 to date shows interest already outruns discretionary fights over EPA, Education, or Commerce; those culture‑war skirmishes won’t reclaim real money if the interest line keeps compounding at a double‑digit clip [2].
Markets, too, have agency. Primary dealers and bond funds absorb the supply that Bessent’s team ships each week via bills, notes, and bonds, and TBAC minutes indicate dealers expect larger coupon auctions in early 2027 [3]. That means price risk today and term‑premia tomorrow, with the bill landing in the public’s lap via higher interest outlays that crowd out choices elsewhere, including discretionary spending in FY2027–2028 [3][6].
Original analysis
Back‑of‑envelope math
- Nine months into FY2026, net interest totals $857B. Annualizing: $857B ÷ 9 × 12 ≈ $1.142T for the full year (directionally conservative if rates or issuance tick up) [2].
- Households: FRED shows ~134.79 million U.S. households in 2025. $1.142T ÷ 134.79M ≈ $8,470 per household in FY2026—pure carry cost, not new services [10].
Contrarian read
- Consensus: “Debt is unsustainable; immediate austerity or crisis is inevitable.”
- Counter: Over the next 12 months, the binding constraint is issuance plumbing, not instant insolvency. Treasury said it will keep note/bond auction sizes steady for “several more quarters,” even as TBAC’s discussion flags a ~$1.3 trillion funding shortfall over FY2027–2028 if current sizes persist [3][4]. Translation: the tough part got kicked into 2027, when terming out becomes unavoidable—and if 10‑year yields stay elevated, coupons will reset higher right as more supply arrives [3][4].
A named‑stakeholder breakdown
- Scott Bessent, Treasury Secretary: He is selling into a rising‑rate, deficit‑heavy backdrop with limited levers beyond maturity mix, buybacks timing, and messaging that calms dealers; his “financial literacy” push won’t bend the interest curve, but execution on issuance strategy will [5][6].
- TBAC (Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee): Its May 2026 minutes telegraphed that dealers expect larger coupon sizes early 2027; if realized, that locks in more high‑coupon debt and lifts interest costs structurally into the 2030s [3].
- CBO: It just printed the scoreboard—$1.4T nine‑month deficit, $857B net interest, and interest > defense year‑to‑date; its 10‑year baseline has net interest jumping from roughly $1.0T in 2026 to about $2.1T by 2036 at 4.6% of GDP, surpassing prior peaks [2][8].
- CRFB (Maya MacGuineas): The outside push to keep borrowing under roughly $2T in FY2026 sharpens the political choice—trim now or accept higher carry costs in 2027–2028 [7].
Historical analogue
- In the early 1990s, net interest peaked near about 3.2% of GDP and then ebbed as growth and falling yields did the heavy lifting from 1992 through 2000; CBO now projects roughly 3.3% in 2026 rising toward 4.6% by 2036 [8][9]. The 1990s playbook—grow out and refinance down—rode a secular disinflation tailwind; today’s baseline bakes in higher average rates, so the “grow and roll” cushion is thinner [8][9].
A simple 2×2: rates path vs. issuance mix
- High rates + bill‑heavy: Best near‑term auctions, worst pass‑through to interest costs; FY2027 refi pain rises.
- High rates + term‑out now: Higher coupons today, but reduced refi risk if the Fed eases late.
- Lower rates + bill‑heavy: Wins everywhere; but you must be lucky on timing.
- Lower rates + term‑out: Overpays briefly, but stabilizes carry; the conservative CFO’s choice.
Treasury’s current stance—hold coupons steady and lean on bills—prioritizes auction smoothness over long‑run carry, which assumes demand for U.S. duration remains adequate and disinflation continues through 2026 [3][4][6]. If that assumption fails and 10‑year yields hover near recent highs into 2027, taxpayers inherit a bigger, stickier interest bill for years [3][8].
What others are missing
Coverage fixates on the deficit topline. The subtler story is the composition shift underneath: CBO category tables show corporate income tax receipts down about 24% year‑to‑date versus last year due to 2025 law changes that boosted deductions, while individual/payroll taxes carried more weight until a February 2026 court ruling triggered roughly $70 billion in customs refunds that hit net tariff revenue [2]. That cocktail tilts financing toward bills and away from locking in term even as net interest outlays climb 13% year over year through June 2026, raising rollover risk into the 2027 refunding window [2][3].
What to watch next
- By September 30, 2026, net interest outlays reported in the Monthly Treasury Statement will exceed $1.12 trillion for FY2026 [2].
- By the February 2027 Quarterly Refunding, Treasury will announce increases to nominal coupon auction sizes (at least the 2‑year and 5‑year tenors), reversing 2026’s “steady for several quarters” guidance [3][4].
- By June 2027, CBO’s Monthly Budget Review will show corporate income tax receipts at least 15% below the same period two years earlier (June 2025), keeping pressure on bill issuance and net interest [2].
My take
If I ran Bessent’s Treasury, I’d front‑load some pain in 2026—nudge up coupons and lengthen maturities while market depth is intact—rather than gamble on a perfect 2027 [3][4]. The CBO scoreboard says interest is already outrunning defense, and the TBAC roadmap says the real refinance hit is coming within four quarters; trim the bill share, accept a few ugly auctions now, and buy rate insurance before the economy proves sticky [2][3][8]. Pair that with a modest, bipartisan PAYGO rule so new tax cuts or credits don’t feed the interest line. Otherwise households are staring at an $8K‑plus annual “interest tax” with nothing to show for it in FY2026–2027 [2][10].
Sources
- Bessent’s Treasury has troubling news for every taxpayer — TheStreet (https://www.thestreet.com/taxes/bessents-treasury-has-troubling-news-for-every-taxpayer) — Frames net interest as the taxpayer’s real bill and cites up‑to‑date deficit and debt figures.
- Monthly Budget Review: June 2026 — Congressional Budget Office (https://www.cbo.gov/system/files/2026-07/61982-MBR.pdf) — Confirms $1.4T nine‑month deficit, $857B net interest (up 13% YoY), and interest outlays surpassing defense year‑to‑date.
- Minutes of the Meeting of the Treasury Borrowing Advisory Committee, May 5, 2026 — U.S. Treasury (https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/sb0491) — Details dealer expectations for 2027 coupon size increases and a ~$1.3T funding gap under current sizes.
- U.S. Treasury keeps auction sizes steady; dealers expect change in early 2027 — Kitco News (https://www.kitco.com/news/off-the-wire/2026-05-06/us-treasury-keeps-auction-sizes-steady-dealers-expect-change-early) — Reports on Treasury’s “several more quarters” guidance and market positioning.
- Bessent wants Americans to avoid easy‑money traps and invest in financial literacy — Washington Post (https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/2026/05/01/bessent-treasury-secretary-profile/) — Profiles Scott Bessent’s agenda and public messaging constraints.
- Bessent Has Limited Options to Halt Climb in Treasury Yields — Bloomberg News (https://news.bloomberglaw.com/capital-markets/bessent-has-limited-options-to-halt-climb-in-treasury-yields) — Explains rising yields and the narrow toolkit Treasury has to influence them.
- CBO Estimates FY 2026 Deficit Overtakes 2025, Totals $1.4 Trillion — CRFB (https://www.crfb.org/press-releases/cbo-estimates-fy-2026-deficit-overtakes-2025-totals-14-trillion) — Provides outside analysis warning FY2026 borrowing may exceed $2T.
- Director’s Statement on the Budget and Economic Outlook: 2026–2036 — CBO (https://www.cbo.gov/publication/62050) — Projects net interest rising from ≈$1.0T in 2026 to ≈$2.1T by 2036, from 3.3% to 4.6% of GDP.
- An Update on the Federal Budget Outlook (March 2026) — Brookings/TPC (https://www.brookings.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/20260311_TPC_GaleAuerbach_FiscalOutlook_FINAL1.pdf) — Notes the prior historical peak of net interest at ≈3.2% of GDP in the early 1990s.
- Total Households (TTLHH) — FRED, St. Louis Fed (https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/TTLHH/) — Supplies the ≈134.79 million household count used for per‑household cost estimates.