The US National Debt is nearly $16,963,703,000, or 16.9 trillion dollars.
No number is ever divisible by zero.
Perhaps you mean minus minus one is plus one. Like subtracting (taking away) a debt is equivalent to adding on. If you bank balance is two dollars in the red (debt) if you add 2 dollars, that debt has gone. minus 2 minus minus 2 is zero, same as minus 2 plus 2 is zero.
Zero is never a divisor. If you ever see a fraction or a problem where zero is adivisor, you can stop right there and toss the whole thing. In the language ofmath, "Division by zero is not permitted".
Undefined: You cannot divide by zero
Yes, 1835 was the first time and perhaps again in the 1850s, but not since.
yes
The probabilities are almost zero.
That is not science. It also implies that who-ever reads it must be in debt, which is not the case.
Yes, the United States had a surplus under Clinton. No -- the answer above confuses the "debt" with "annual deficit." Yes, Clinton ran an annual budget surplus during certain years of his administration, but no, he did not attain "zero debt." That term refers to the accumulated debt of the U. S. since the 18th century, and Clinton added somewhere between $1.6 trillion and $2 trillion to the debt between 1992 and 2000. For comparative purposes, during the 12 years of the Reagan and first Bush administrations, about $3.2 trillion was added to the debt, and during the 8 years of the George W. Bush administration, about $4.4 trillion was added. -Tedwin223 Improved answer. Actually Bill Clinton gave us a Surplus, giving us SPENDING MONEY! When Bush came into office we plunged into debt and got a trillion dollar deficit.
zero
It has a financial leverage of zero.
None, the US has always been in debt. The debt owed by the US is held by the purchasers of treasury bonds issued by the US. During George Washington's presidency the US was in debt due to costs incurred by the Revolutionary War as well as costs for government operation during his presidency. No presidency has ever operated without Congress spending money, borrowed for various programs.
us federal debt in 1850
us federal debt in 1850
no
No Monavie has absolutely zero debt