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Under pressure: Tracking the pain in G7 government debt

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on April 14, 2026

5 min read

· Last updated: April 14, 2026

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Under pressure: Tracking the pain in G7 government debt
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By Yoruk Bahceli, Ben Welsh, Dhara Ranasinghe and Rocky Swift LONDON/NEW YORK/TOKYO, April 14 (Reuters) - The world's major economies have seen their debt levels surge in recent years, while ever-

Surging G7 Government Debt: Borrowing Costs and Fiscal Strain in 2024

By Yoruk Bahceli, Ben Welsh, Dhara Ranasinghe and Rocky Swift

Understanding the Mounting Debt Crisis in Major Economies

LONDON/NEW YORK/TOKYO, April 14 (Reuters) - The world's major economies have seen their debt levels surge in recent years, while ever-increasing spending demands -- from ageing populations to climate change and defence -- are adding to the pressure.

Geopolitical Tensions and Inflation Risks

Enter the Iran war https://www.reuters.com/world/iran/, which has rekindled inflation risks that will strain governments hit by a multitude of shocks this decade alone.

Impact on European Borrowing Costs

The conflict triggered the biggest jump in borrowing costs nL8N40C1RS in years in March in Europe. Heavily dependent on energy imports, the region's government finances nL8N3ZZ1H0 are facing growing pressure from surging oil and gas prices.

Consequences of High Debt Burden

A high debt burden that costs a government more risks hurting living standards by constraining spending and capping growth. In a worst-case scenario, a country can hit a wall and struggle to service its debt.

This live dashboard https://www.reuters.com/data/under-pressure-2026-04-14/ tracks key measures of government debt in the Group of Seven (G7) advanced economies:

Rising Borrowing Costs

Government bond yields across the G7 have surged following the COVID-19 pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, as central banks raised interest rates aggressively to tame surging inflation.

Elevated longer-term borrowing costs also reflect that investors want better returns to compensate for the risk of holding the debt.

The Iran war is the latest challenge. Britain, where 10-year yields in March hit their highest since 2008 nL1N40I09W, pays the highest among peers.

Going Shorter: Shifts in Bond Maturities

The difference between shorter and long-dated government bond yields has increased sharply, making it relatively more expensive to borrow for longer.

The pressure is being intensified by fiscal concerns, central banks reducing bond holdings and big traditional investors in long-term debt such as insurers and pension funds reducing their purchases from Japan to Britain.

To mitigate the impact, many governments have started selling bonds with shorter maturities. But that's risky too because they have to repay or refinance the debt sooner, so any rise in yields feeds faster into interest costs.

One-Way Track? Debt Sustainability Concerns

Debt is roughly equal to or higher than economic output across the G7 bar Germany, Europe's biggest economy.

The 2008 global financial crisis, the 2011-12 euro zone debt crisis and the 2020 pandemic all increased debt levels, hurting growth and raising spending.

Japan nL1N40W005 has the highest level, with debt more than double its output, while even Germany, once a champion of austerity, is ramping up its borrowing nL8N3PR014 to fund defence and public investments.

Longer-term, ageing populations, interest bills and increased spending on defence and climate change will raise debt levels further unless there are policy changes.

Interest Payments and Fiscal Pressure

Higher post-pandemic borrowing costs are feeding into governments' interest payments as they refinance low-cost debt at higher market rates.

While well below historical peaks for many countries, interest payments as a share of output have risen steadily across most G7 countries recently, notably in the United States nL1N40E0UZ.

In fact, interest payments across OECD countries, which include the U.S., already topped defence spending nL1N3Q30BD in 2024.

Rising Risk: The Term Premium

The term premium How Trump's policy risk is showing in Treasury bonds on U.S. Treasuries, a key measure of how much compensation investors demand for the risk of holding longer-term bonds, has risen since the pandemic.

That reflects anything from concern about U.S. fiscal policy to the Federal Reserve cutting its bond holdings and worries about its independence as well as longer-term inflation uncertainty.

It's a global phenomenon. The term premium across major OECD countries reached its highest in over 10 years, the organisation found recently.

Mind the Gap: Diverging Risk Premiums in the Euro Zone

If there is one debt metric that has improved for some, it's how little nL8N3SK0JS investors are now willing to be paid to hold individual euro zone governments' bonds rather than those of Germany, which is deemed Europe's safest borrower.

The bloc has come a long way from its debt crisis when Greece needed a bailout and the risk of a euro zone breakup sent those costs surging.

Look at Italy. Once the poster child for debt woes, growing European cohesion after the pandemic, political stability and a lower budget deficit have pushed its debt risk premium to the lowest since 2008 recently.

In contrast, investors now attach greater risk to holding French nL8N3T10W9 bonds as a fractured political backdrop since a shock 2024 election slows efforts to rein in the budget deficit nL1N40C0X0.

Buyer Beware: Spotlight on Japan

Japan, the most indebted country in the developed world, is in the spotlight because the spending plans of Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi have rekindled fiscal concerns. The nation's debt sales are carefully watched for signs of stress.

Actually, Japan's bond market woes kicked off nL1N3RT03P last May after a disastrous long-term bond sale.

Long-term Japanese bond yields surged to records after the sale of a 20-year bond saw the lowest level of demand since 2012 and another measure of investor sentiment reached its second-worst since at least 1987.

Japan trimmed longer-dated bond sales in response, helping stabilise demand. Still, borrowing costs face upward pressure.

(Reporting by Yoruk Bahceli, Dhara Ranasinghe and Rocky Swift; Graphics by Ben Welsh; editing by Elisa Martinuzzi and Toby Chopra)

Key Takeaways

  • G7 debt-to-GDP ratios remain high—Japan leads, Germany lags behind peers (oecd.org).
  • Iran war and energy shock have pushed UK 10‑year gilt yields to ~5%, highest since 2008, signaling rising global borrowing costs (macrospire.com).
  • Interest payments across G7/OECD nations are rising as a share of GDP, with U.S. outlays already exceeding defense spending (oecd.org)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main factors driving up G7 government debt?
Major factors include increased spending demands, ageing populations, rising defence and climate change costs, as well as shocks like the COVID-19 pandemic and the war in Iran.
How have government bond yields changed in the G7 countries?
Government bond yields have surged since the pandemic, driven by inflation, aggressive interest rate hikes, and recent global conflicts increasing borrowing costs.
Why are governments issuing more short-term bonds?
Governments are favoring short-term bonds to mitigate higher long-term borrowing costs but this increases refinancing risk as any yield rise feeds faster into interest costs.
How does rising debt affect G7 economies?
High debt burdens constrain government spending, can slow economic growth, and raise the risk of fiscal crises if countries struggle to service their debt.
What is the term premium and why is it rising?
The term premium is the extra compensation investors demand for holding long-term bonds; it's rising due to greater fiscal risks, inflation uncertainty, and central banks reducing bond holdings.

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