A comparative study of sovereign finances has found that the United States now carries a national debt burden per person that is 7.5 times higher than that of China, highlighting a growing divergence in how public borrowing translates into economic pressure on citizens across major global economies.
The findings, published by TechGaged.com, place U.S. national debt per person at $110,848, compared with $14,764 in China. While China’s overall government debt exceeds $20.8 trillion, its population of more than 1.4 billion people significantly reduces the per-capita impact. By contrast, the United States’ debt stock of $38.7 trillion is distributed across a population of roughly 349 million, sharply elevating the per-person figure.
The analysis comes at a time when fiscal sustainability, rising deficits and long-term debt dynamics are once again under scrutiny in global financial markets, particularly as governments grapple with higher interest rates and slowing growth.
U.S. Tops Global Rankings on Per-Person Debt
According to the research, the United States stands alone at the top of the international ranking for national debt per person, surpassing both advanced and emerging economies by a considerable margin. Japan follows in second place, with debt of $90,502 per person, reflecting its long-standing reliance on government borrowing to support economic growth.
Major European economies, including Belgium, France, Italy and the United Kingdom, cluster well below U.S. levels, despite facing their own fiscal challenges. Large economies such as Germany and Australia also record substantially lower per-person debt burdens, even though their overall economic scale is comparable in certain respects.
The report argues that viewing debt on a per-capita basis offers a clearer picture of where fiscal pressure is most acute, cutting through the distortions created by headline debt totals alone.
“Looking at debt on a per-person basis cuts through headline totals and shows where fiscal pressure is most concentrated,” said Rokas Baltrusaitis, Senior Research Analyst at TechGaged.com. “When debt grows faster than population, governments face stronger incentives to rely on monetary expansion. That backdrop helps explain why investors increasingly view Bitcoin and other scarce digital assets as long-term macro hedges rather than short-term trades.”
Fiscal Pressure and Policy Constraints
Economists have long debated the most meaningful way to assess government debt sustainability, with measures ranging from debt-to-GDP ratios to interest-to-revenue metrics. The TechGaged analysis adds another dimension by focusing on how debt burdens are effectively shared among populations.
High per-person debt levels are often associated with sustained fiscal deficits, limited room for counter-cyclical spending, and greater dependence on accommodative monetary policy. In practical terms, this can translate into higher future taxes, reduced public services, or prolonged periods of low real interest rates designed to ease the cost of servicing debt.
For the United States, the findings underscore concerns that debt has continued to rise faster than population growth over recent decades, a trend that has accelerated following successive economic shocks and large-scale fiscal interventions.
Implications for Markets and Digital Assets
Beyond traditional fiscal analysis, the research points to growing implications for investor behaviour and asset allocation. Persistently rising per-person debt levels, particularly in economies with limited fiscal headroom, are increasingly shaping discussions around currency stability, long-term purchasing power and real returns.
As governments rely more heavily on debt issuance and supportive monetary conditions, concerns about currency dilution and negative real yields tend to intensify. In this environment, assets with fixed or transparent supply dynamics are attracting renewed attention.
The widening per-person debt gap between the United States and other major economies, the report suggests, helps explain why fiscal metrics are becoming a more prominent consideration in digital asset risk assessment and portfolio construction. Rather than being viewed solely as speculative instruments, certain crypto assets are increasingly framed by investors as macro-sensitive tools linked to broader sovereign debt and monetary trends.
While the long-term consequences of rising per-capita debt remain uncertain, the analysis highlights how differing demographic and fiscal structures can produce starkly different outcomes — even among the world’s largest economies.







