DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

How the Iran war’s nearly $1 billion-a-day price tag is deepening America’s debt crisis

March 11, 2026
in News
How the Iran war’s nearly $1 billion-a-day price tag is deepening America’s debt crisis

On February 11, the Congressional Budget Office released its closely-watched, 10-year projections for the U.S. budget, this addition covering FYs 2026 to 2035. As expected, the numbers were extremely dire, positing deficits and debt that by the decade’s close respectively each 6.5% of GDP and 120% of GDP. The sundry economists and think tanks that evaluated the numbers, and members of Congress on both sides of the aisle, called the forecast extremely dire and our current course unsustainable. The trend sounding the loudest alarm: An explosion in interest costs that even today account for almost one-fifth of all U.S. spending.

Then came the war in Iran.

The conflict is pushing the accelerator on a train that already risked hopping the tracks. Though the conflict’s costs over its first ten days are immense, the budget burden would be relatively light were it to end in, say, the next few days, or a week. In his Florida press conference on March 9th, President Trump avowed that “the war is very complete” and stop conclude “soon.” But should the the U.S. and Israel’s joint campaign to crush Iran’s nuclear program and crush its capacity to fire ballistic missiles and “kamikaze” drones drag on for even several more weeks, the damage to America’s fragile finances will prove substantial. Especially when you add a second blow that fell a week before the onslaught on Iran—the probable lost revenue arising from the Supreme Court’s decision to scotch the Trump tariffs.

The staggering costs for the early days are in, and now the bill is mounting at nearly $1 billion a day

In one of the earliest estimates, the Center for Strategic and International Studies reckoned that the U.S. in the war’s first 100 hours spent a total of $3.7 billion, including $3.1 billion on replacing munitions—and that 95% of that number wasn’t budgeted, hence amounting to an added expense for taxpayers. But on March 5th, Congressional sources told MS Now that the Pentagon put the number for the first 48 hours at $5.6 billion, a bill that covered only munitions replacement and didn’t include the operating costs for the likes of aircraft and destroyers. Using the CSIS analysis, it would appear that the additional costs reached several hundred million dollars.

Ken Smutters, faculty director of the Penn Wharton Budget Model, told CNN that daily costs fell substantially following the initial shock and awe. He forecasts that the meter is now running at roughly $800 million a day. Other estimates, including that advanced by John Phillips, a British safety, security and risk advisor, put the daily tab at $1 billion. Smutters told Fortune that if the conflict rages for a total of two months, or seven more weeks, that it will inflict net new expense on U.S. taxpayers of $65 billion.

An even moderately-long war makes a big situation significantly worse

In its February 11 report, the CBO projected a gap between expenditures and revenue for FY 2026 of $1.853 billion. The U.S. gets there by spending 33% more than the Treasury collects in taxes. An Iran war that lasts 60 days would hiked the deficit by that $65 billion plus $1.4 billion in interest, or around $66.4 billion. That’s an increase of 3.6% that would raise the shortfall’s share of GDP from the forecast 5.8% to 6.0%. The $66.4 billion would get tacked onto the deficit, and raises the amount we need to borrow, plus interest, year after year.

But it’s best not to look at the war impact in isolation. Just days before the first attack, the SCOTUS also dealt a blow to the budget by nixing the Trump tariffs. The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that if Trump replaces the former border duties with a 10% blanket rate, the U.S would collect $74 billion less this year than under the previous regime. Add that $74 billion to the $65 billion in spending, and the budget hammering almost doubles to $139 billion, raising the CBO-projected deficit by 7.5%.

A leathery former Senate leader used to quip that spending billions here and billions there eventually added up to real money. The lengthy war in Iran may be a Nobel quest, but it will also mean “real money.”

The post How the Iran war’s nearly $1 billion-a-day price tag is deepening America’s debt crisis appeared first on Fortune.

Afghanistan’s Taliban government rejects U.S. allegation that it engages in ‘hostage diplomacy’
News

Afghanistan’s Taliban government rejects U.S. allegation that it engages in ‘hostage diplomacy’

by Los Angeles Times
March 11, 2026

KABUL, Afghanistan — Afghanistan’s Taliban government on Tuesday rejected U.S. allegations that it detains foreigners to obtain leverage over other countries, saying ...

Read more
News

Trump Is the Anti-Trump

March 11, 2026
News

XAI’s Macrohard project stalls as Tesla ramps up a similar AI agent effort

March 11, 2026
News

Teacher’s aide pleads guilty to forcing autistic boy to eat hot sauce

March 11, 2026
News

SBA boss Kelly Loeffler announces ‘state-by-state’ fraud crackdown, touts 54% headcount slash

March 11, 2026
Is flying today really worse than in the 1950s?

Is flying today really worse than in the 1950s?

March 11, 2026
U.S. Gas Prices Jump for 11th Straight Day, and Oil Pushes Higher

U.S. Gas Prices Jump for 11th Straight Day, and Oil Pushes Higher

March 11, 2026
‘Pulp Fiction’ director Quentin Tarantino blasts Rosanna Arquette for trashing film after she ‘took the money’

‘Pulp Fiction’ director Quentin Tarantino blasts Rosanna Arquette for trashing film after she ‘took the money’

March 11, 2026

DNYUZ © 2026

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2026