US debt clock
runs out of
digits

BBC
October 9, 2008
The US government's debts
have ballooned so badly the
National Debt Clock in New York
has run out of digits to record
the spiralling figure.
The digital
counter marks the national debt
level, but when that passed the
$10 trillion point last month,
the sign could not display the
full amount.
The board was
erected to highlight the $2.7
trillion level of debt in 1989.
The clock's
owners say two more zeros will
be added, allowing the clock to
record a quadrillion dollars of
debt.
Douglas
Durst, son of the late Seymour
Durst - the clock's inventor -
hopes to replace the Manhattan
clock with its lengthier
replacement early next year.
For the time
being, the Times Square
counter's electronic dollar sign
has been replaced with the extra
digit required.
For its part,
the digital dollar symbol has
been supplanted by a cheaper
version - perhaps a sign of the
times for the American economy.
Some
economists believe the $700bn
bail-out plan for ailing US
financial institutions could
send the national debt level to
$11 trillion. |