From BusinessWeek.com:
 
More than $1 trillion of high-yield debt  will come due between now and 2015—a big potential weight on the U.S.  economic recovery
Whatever the economic indicator—from  manufacturing reports to home sales to consumer spending—the message  is clear: The U.S. recovery is under way. It will likely be a tepid  comeback, but it will still fit economists' definition of a recovery.  While most post-World War II recessions have been followed by strong  recoveries, economists and business leaders all caution that this time  it will be different.
The Great Recession had many causes.  Clearly the bursting of the bubble in asset values, particularly U.S.  residential real estate, was the main cause of the subprime mortgage  crisis and the resultant bust. Those asset valuations did not shoot  higher on their own; they were sustained by ever-increasing debt levels  that primed the pump and inflated the bubble.
While asset values can evaporate in an  instant, the indebtedness assumed to acquire the asset does not. Significant  debt can take years and even decades to eradicate. Unless, of course,  the debtor goes bankrupt. While filing for Chapter 11 may appear to  be a quick solution, it is by no means an easy one. Few debtors are  willing to write off their equity unless there is no other alternative.
 
