Nobody decides how much money the government has to borrow. When the government wants to borrow money it has to issue or create debt with the US Treasury.
yes. states can borrow money from citizens through government bonds
Governments raise most their funds through taxes and other revenue, and occasionally tax revenue is not enough for pay for the government taxes so as a result the government must borrow money by issuing bonds. A bond is a certificate stating that the government has borrowed a certain sum of money from the owner.
Yes, you can borrow money from your IRA, but there are specific rules and limitations that must be followed.
The Executive Branch
The authority to borrow money must be granted in the trust document. You need to review it.The authority to borrow money must be granted in the trust document. You need to review it.The authority to borrow money must be granted in the trust document. You need to review it.The authority to borrow money must be granted in the trust document. You need to review it.
Yes, you can borrow money from an IRA account, but there are specific rules and limitations that must be followed.
constitutionally limited
The power that is given to congress is the ability to borrow money.
none
Depends on what you are borrowing it for. Small business loans, FHA loans, student loans are through different agencies. You don't borrow directly from the government. You borrow from a private lender, and a government program guarantees them repayment.
It must either "borrow" it from somewhere, creating a budget deficit - or - they must print more money, devaluing the nation's currency and causing inflation.