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Top 5 Sources of Borrowing for Each of the Top 10 National Debts

🏦 Top 5 Sources of Borrowing for Each of the Top 10 National Debts

Data compiled from central banks, treasury reports, IMF, and OECD sources (2024-2026 estimates)


🇺🇸 United States (~$38.3T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Federal Reserve System ~15% ($5.2T) Domestic Central Bank [[1]]
2 U.S. Savings Bonds & Intragovernmental ~20% ($7T) Domestic Government Accounts [[9]]
3 Mutual Funds & Investment Funds ~11% ($3.7T) Domestic Private [[9]]
4 Foreign Governments/Central Banks ~25% ($8T total) Overseas [[4]]
5 Depository Institutions & Pension Funds ~8% combined Domestic Financial [[1]]

Top foreign holders: Japan (1.1T), China (0.8T), UK ($0.7T) [[4]][[10]]


🇯🇵 Japan (~$11.5T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Bank of Japan ~46.3% Domestic Central Bank [[19]]
2 Domestic Insurance Companies ~15.6% Domestic Financial [[19]]
3 Domestic Commercial Banks ~14.5% Domestic Financial [[19]]
4 Pension Funds (Public/Private) ~8-10% Domestic Institutional [[22]]
5 Households & Individual Investors ~5-7% Domestic Retail [[23]]

Note: ~88% of Japanese debt is held domestically, reducing external vulnerability [[19]]


Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 State-Owned Commercial Banks ~40-50% Domestic Financial [[11]]
2 Policy Banks (e.g., CDB, Exim Bank) ~15-20% State Financial Institutions [[11]]
3 People’s Bank of China ~10-15% Domestic Central Bank [[16]]
4 Local Government Financing Vehicles ~15-25% Quasi-Sovereign [[12]]
5 Households & Corporate Deposits ~10% Domestic Retail/Corporate [[17]]

Note: China’s external debt is relatively low (~$17.6T RMB total external), with most borrowing domestic [[16]]


🇬🇧 United Kingdom (~$3.4-4.1T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Bank of England (Quantitative Easing) ~25-30% Domestic Central Bank [[28]]
2 UK Pension Funds & Insurers ~20-25% Domestic Institutional [[36]]
3 Foreign Investors (incl. Central Banks) ~25-30% Overseas [[30]]
4 UK Banks & Building Societies ~10-15% Domestic Financial [[35]]
5 Households & Retail Investors ~5-8% Domestic Retail [[36]]

Gilts are actively traded; foreign ownership concentrated in UK, US, and Eurozone investors [[29]]


🇫🇷 France (~$3.4-3.9T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Eurosystem Central Banks (ECB/Banque de France) ~30-35% Eurozone Central Banks [[45]]
2 French Domestic Banks & Insurers ~25-30% Domestic Financial [[40]]
3 Foreign Institutional Investors ~20-25% Overseas [[45]]
4 French Households & Retail ~8-12% Domestic Retail [[49]]
5 Eurozone Non-French Investors ~10-15% Regional Institutional [[45]]

France benefits from deep eurozone capital markets and ECB asset purchase programs [[40]]


🇮🇹 Italy (~$3.1-3.5T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Italian Domestic Banks ~35-40% Domestic Financial [[42]]
2 Eurosystem Central Banks (ECB) ~25-30% Eurozone Central Banks [[45]]
3 Italian Households & Retail ~15-20% Domestic Retail [[42]]
4 Foreign Institutional Investors ~15-20% Overseas [[45]]
5 Italian Insurance/Pension Funds ~5-10% Domestic Institutional [[42]]

Italy has the lowest share of public debt held by non-residents among major eurozone economies [[42]]


🇩🇪 Germany (~$2.8-3.1T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Eurosystem Central Banks (ECB/Bundesbank) ~28-30% Eurozone Central Banks [[47]]
2 Foreign Central Banks & Sovereign Funds ~14-15% Overseas Official [[47]]
3 Other Eurozone Institutional Investors ~14-15% Regional Financial [[47]]
4 Non-Eurozone Foreign Investors ~13-16% Overseas Private [[50]]
5 German Domestic Banks & Insurers ~10-12% Domestic Financial [[47]]

German Bunds are global safe-haven assets; ~40-45% held by non-residents [[50]]


🇮🇳 India (~$2.9T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Reserve Bank of India ~30-35% Domestic Central Bank [[57]]
2 Indian Commercial Banks ~40-45% Domestic Financial [[57]]
3 Insurance Companies & Provident Funds ~10-15% Domestic Institutional [[58]]
4 Foreign Portfolio Investors (FPIs) ~3-5% Overseas Private [[56]]
5 Households & Retail (via G-Secs) ~2-4% Domestic Retail [[57]]

~96.6% of India’s public debt is internal (domestic); external debt is ~$747B total [[57]][[62]]


🇨🇦 Canada (~$1.8-3.1T federal/provincial debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Bank of Canada ~25-30% Domestic Central Bank [[64]]
2 Canadian Pension Funds ~20-25% Domestic Institutional [[65]]
3 Canadian Commercial Banks ~15-20% Domestic Financial [[64]]
4 Foreign Institutional Investors ~15-20% Overseas [[66]]
5 Insurance Companies & Mutual Funds ~10-15% Domestic Financial [[64]]

Canadian debt is considered high-quality; strong domestic institutional base [[66]]


🇧🇷 Brazil (~$1.7T debt)

Rank Holder/Source Approx. Share Type
1 Brazilian Financial Institutions ~31% Domestic Banks/Funds [[72]]
2 Investment Funds (Domestic) ~25-30% Domestic Asset Managers [[72]]
3 Foreign Investors ~13-15% Overseas [[75]]
4 Central Bank of Brazil (Reserves) ~10-12% Domestic Central Bank [[76]]
5 Social Security & Public Funds ~8-10% Domestic Government [[80]]

~65-70% of Brazilian federal debt is held by domestic creditors; external exposure limited [[73]]


🔑 Key Cross-Country Patterns

Pattern Implication
🏦 Central Bank Dominance Most major economies rely heavily on their own central banks via QE programs [[1]][[19]][[28]]
🏠 Domestic Bias Japan, India, Brazil hold >85% of debt domestically, reducing currency/rollover risk [[19]][[57]][[73]]
🌍 Foreign Reliance US, UK, Germany depend more on foreign investors (~25-30%), creating exposure to capital flow shifts [[45]][[50]]
📊 Institutional Depth Countries with deep pension/insurance sectors (Canada, UK) have more stable domestic demand [[65]][[36]]
⚠️ Vulnerability Indicator High foreign-held debt + high external debt = greater crisis risk (notably absent in Japan/India)

💡 Methodology Note: Figures are estimates based on central bank reports, treasury data, IMF Article IV consultations, and OECD statistics. Shares may not sum to 100% due to rounding, overlapping categories, or unallocated holdings. “Debt” definitions vary (gross vs. net, central vs. general government).