The US Treasury Department is now accepting Venmo and PayPal payments from those who want to donate money to reduce the nation’s ballooning $36.7 trillion debt.

The digital payment platforms can be used after accessing the “Gifts to Reduce the Public Debt” page on Pay.gov, NPR’s Jack Corbett noted.

The expansion of payment options comes amid growing public concern over the debt, which has surged from $19.59 trillion in 2010 to its current level, an increase of 87%, according to the Treasury Department.

The donation program has existed since 1996, with a total of $67.3 million contributed — an amount that remains negligible compared to the federal debt.

Critics have questioned the value of individual donations toward the national debt.

Samson Mow, CEO of Bitcoin technology firm JAN3, compared the effort to “sending Bitcoin to a burn address.”

President Donald Trump’s recently enacted “Big, Beautiful Bill” is projected to add an additional $3.4 trillion to the debt over the next decade, according to the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office.

The legislation prompted a public dispute between Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, who criticized the bill for raising the debt ceiling by $5 trillion.

Despite the Treasury’s new push for public donations, the scale of the debt continues to raise questions about the sustainability of US fiscal policy and the effectiveness of such symbolic gestures.

Meanwhile, Bridgewater Associates founder Ray Dalio is sounding the alarm, warning that the country is at growing risk of a fiscal crisis unless urgent policy changes are made.

Dalio has repeatedly likened the mounting debt to “plaque in arteries,” cautioning that the cost of servicing the debt is “severely diminishing purchasing power.”

“We are spending 40% more than our income,” he said, adding that “we’re approaching the point where we may need to borrow just to pay the interest on our existing debt — this is the classic debt death spiral.”

According to Dalio, the US is approaching an inflection point where debt and interest obligations could crowd out essential government spending.

He has called on lawmakers to reduce the budget deficit from approximately 7% of GDP to 3%, a move he believes could be achieved with a mix of spending cuts and tax increases.

Dalio expressed concern over weakening investor confidence, citing falling bond sales, a weaker dollar, and rising gold and equity prices.

“Unless the budget deficit is cut to about 3% of GDP, the supply of debt will be much greater than the demand,” he warned, adding that debt service costs will “severely squeeze out the government’s ability to spend.”

While he sees a low risk of an immediate crisis, Dalio estimates that the chance of a financial “trauma” caused by a sudden loss of confidence now exceeds 50% if no action is taken.

He has urged bipartisan cooperation, stating that early intervention is “much cheaper and less painful than waiting for a tipping point.”

Dalio continues to call for “bipartisan practicality and collective sacrifice” to stabilize the fiscal trajectory before it becomes unmanageable.

The Post has sought comment from the White House and the Treasury Department.

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