Skip to content
OVistoaIntelligence index
AboutMethodologyPricingDocs
Sign inSign up
BREAKINGPerson found dead in car after it plows into health club in Portland, Oregon13 min ago
Top StoriesUnited StatesCanadaWorldPoliticsGeneralBusinessTechHealthAviationSportsEntertainmentPublishers

America’s Debt Is Now Bigger Than the GDP. Does It Matter?

1 articles · 1 outlets · spread 0.00

America’s Debt Is Now Bigger Than the GDP. Does It Matter?
politics1 d ago

America’s Debt Is Now Bigger Than the GDP. Does It Matter?

Full coverage view across outlets, lean, source quality, and framing. Compare framing without algorithmic ranking.

1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
OVistoa

Article-level news analysis, transparent scoring, and API tools for readers, publishers, and teams that need source context.

DMCA and copyright review

Copyright owners can submit notices, counter-notices, and source material concerns through the dedicated review flow.

Open DMCA review

Product

  • Home
  • Feed
  • Search
  • Topics
  • Saved

Platform

  • About
  • Methodology
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me

From the Left

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

From the Center

1 outlet
  • Newsweek·May 1

    America’s Debt Is Now Bigger Than the GDP. Does It Matter?

    The United States national debt has now grown beyond the size of the country’s GDP, punctuating a long-running trajectory that has left budget hawks skittish, but Congress appears uninterested in countering.According to advance estimates released Thursday by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), America’s gross domestic product (GDP) totaled $31.22 trillion over the 12 months to March 31, now slightly under the $31.27 trillion in debt held by the country at the end of this quarter.It marks the first crossing of the 100 percent threshold—double the historical average—outside of wartime since shortly after WWII and briefly during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. This has renewed calls from concerned lawmakers and groups for an urgent change in course, as the U.S. continues to run historically large deficits that could soon break the 106 percent record.“We have now borrowed more money than our economy produces in a year,” Maya MacGuineas, president of the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, told Newsweek. “The debt slows economic growth, pushes up borrowing costs and prices, and leaves us vulnerable to a fiscal crisis in the future,” she said. “There are good milestones, and bad ones, and this is the worst kind there is.”Why

From the Right

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

Claim synthesis

Pro users see canonical claims across the cluster and which outlets reported each one.

Learn more

Outlets covering this story

Newsweek

First seen

May 1, 2026

Latest

May 1, 2026

Outlets

1

Diversity

100/100

  • Pricing
  • API docs
  • Publishers
  • Account

    • Sign in
    • Create account
    • Reader settings
    • API console

    Legal

    • Terms
    • Privacy
    • Security
    • DMCA

    © 2026 Vistoa. All rights reserved.

    Limited excerpts, attribution, analysis, and outbound publisher links remain core product boundaries.