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Matthew Rutherford, Treasury's assistant secretary for financial markets, said these "extraordinary measures" would allow the government to keep operating for a period of time after May 19, but he said at the present time Treasury could not be more specific on when it would run out of maneuvering room. However, the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington think tank, issued a report last week that said the date of a potential default would occur later than the July or August that many experts had previously thought. The center's report said the government might be able to keep borrowing into September or possibly October. Rutherford said that Treasury would "provide greater clarity at a later date regarding how long extraordinary measures will allow Treasury to continue to borrow."
[Associated
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