People often refer to the idea of a Twin Deficit, especially in the US.
The twin deficit refers to
- National Debt (created through annual public borrowing) US national debt = 65% of GDP
- Current account deficit on Balance of Payments US current account deficit 5% of GDP
Sometimes it is easy to confuse the two. National debt refers to how much the government needs to borrow from the private sector. Note this borrowing is mainly borrowing from the domestic private sector, although foreigners can buy US bonds and securities.
The current account deficit refers to the level of imports being greater than exports. This deficit does not have anything to do with the government directly, but is due to an economy importing more than it exports of goods and services.
Reasons for Current account deficit include:
- Overvalued exchange rate
- Uncompetitive export sector
- High consumer spending sucking in imports.
The National Debt occurs when Government spending is greater than tax revenues, therefore the government has to borrow from private sector)
A current account deficit needs to be financed by a surplus on the financial account
Reasons for National Debt basically involve the government spending more than they receive in tax.
Are the Two Deficits linked?
Not necessarily. You could argue a national debt creates increased AD, which encourages consumer spending on imports. But, you can have a national debt without creating a current account deficit, e.g. Japan.
Consumer Debt
You could also argue that there is a third deficit. That is when consumer debt is high. This is especially a problem in the UK and US at the moment.






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[...] Difference between national debt / budget deficit and trade deficit – Government borrowing vs importing more than exporting – completely different, but often confused. [...]
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