Global public debt is approaching 100% of world GDP, a level not seen since World War II.
The IMF is sounding the alarm: with debt high and borrowing costs rising, governments can no longer defer hard fiscal choices.
The IMF chart tells a dramatic story. Global public debt as a percentage of GDP has spiked through several historical crises: World War I, the Great Depression, World War II, the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, and COVID-19.
However, the current trajectory is different. Unlike post-World War II, when debt levels declined sharply, today’s projections show debt continuing to rise. The IMF estimates global public debt will soon exceed World War II peaks.
Era Dabla-Norris and Rodrigo Valdes write in F&D magazine that “trust is now essential to reconciling competing priorities.” In other words, governments face impossible trade-offs between spending, taxation, and debt servicing.
Fun Fact: After World War II, global debt dropped from 150% to under 50% of GDP within two decades. Today’s projections show the opposite trajectory.
The IMF’s debt warning has direct implications for crypto markets:
The chart shows debt spikes during every major 20th-century crisis. However, each previous spike was followed by a decline. The current trajectory breaks this pattern.
COVID-19 pushed debt above 100% of GDP. Instead of declining, projections show a continued increase. For the first time since World War II, there is no clear path back to sustainable levels.
For crypto, this macro backdrop strengthens the case for decentralized alternatives to government-issued currencies. As fiscal trust erodes, trustless systems gain appeal.