In fact, the Federal Reserve only needs to print seven to eight trillion dollars to solve a large part of the U.S. debt problem. Although the scale of U.S. debt has reached 36 trillion dollars, due to interest rate hikes in recent years, the prices of many 20- to 30-year U.S. bonds have significantly shrunk, with basic prices around 60-70% of their original value. After deducting the 4.5 trillion dollars of U.S. bonds held by the Federal Reserve, the actual amount of U.S. bonds circulating in the market is less than 30 trillion dollars. If the Federal Reserve buys another seven to eight trillion dollars, then there will be just over 20 trillion dollars left in the market, which is already a very healthy scale of government bonds. Some netizens ask if the Federal Reserve buying seven to eight trillion dollars of U.S. bonds will lead to a significant devaluation of the dollar? Let's compare it to the pandemic: during that time, the Federal Reserve purchased nearly seven trillion dollars of U.S. bonds in a year. Did the dollar experience significant devaluation from 2020 to 2022? The dollar index has fluctuated within a reasonable range over the past few years, and there has been no significant devaluation. Therefore, many domestic experts have exaggerated the impact of the Federal Reserve's money printing on the dollar. It is well known that the total global dollar assets have already reached 300 trillion dollars, so printing another seven to eight trillion dollars won't have much impact and won't cause major problems. A 10% devaluation of the dollar would be quite good.