Yellen warns Congress again on U.S. debt limit as Republicans balk
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[August 10, 2021]
By Susan Heavey
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen on Monday again urged Congress to raise the
national debt limit through bipartisan action, as more Republicans
balked at the prospect of raising the federal government's borrowing
capability.
Yellen, in another notice to U.S. lawmakers, warned of economic harm if
the debt ceiling is not raised or suspended before the nation's
borrowing capability is exhausted in October.
Failure to increase or suspend the statutory debt limit - now at $28.5
trillion - could trigger another federal government shutdown or a debt
default.
Congress should act "as it has in the past to protect the full faith and
credit of the United States," Yellen said in a statement released by the
Treasury Department, calling it "a shared responsibility."
"Failure to meet those obligations would cause irreparable harm to the
U.S. economy and the livelihoods of all Americans," she added.
Yellen, who pressed U.S. lawmakers in a letter last month and in a
hearing in June, said the majority of the debt had accrued prior to the
Biden administration and that Republicans and Democrats had previously
worked together multiple times to address the borrowing issue.
But Republicans, who lost the White House in the November 2020 election
and control of the U.S. Senate two months later, have sought to tie the
issue to President Joe Biden and his fellow Democrats' COVID-19 pandemic
spending and plans to expand social benefits, which they have denounced.
Some have also balked at the cost of a bipartisan infrastructure bill,
which is expected to pass by Tuesday morning with some Republican votes.
Senate Republican Leader Mitch McConnell last week said Democrats, who
have effective control of the chamber, should instead address the debt
limit themselves.
"They deserve to have total ownership of that decision," he said on the
Senate floor on Monday.
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U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen answers questions during the
Senate Appropriations Subcommittee hearing to examine the FY22
budget request for the Treasury Department on Capitol Hill in
Washington, DC, U.S., June 23, 2021. Greg Nash/Pool via REUTERS
Republican Senator Rob Portman echoed that sentiment
in a separate CNBC interview, tying it to the $1.9 trillion COVID-19
relief package that passed in March and the roughly $3.5 trillion
social spending plan proposed by Democrats.
"They're the ones who have pushed this debt to the point where it is
really getting dangerously high," Portman added, saying Democrats
could use a process known as reconciliation to address the debt
limit without Republican votes.
The national debt ballooned by almost 40% to nearly $28 trillion
under former President Donald Trump, fueled by the passage of tax
cuts in 2017 and a flood of spending in 2020 to counter the economic
hit from the coronavirus pandemic.
Republican Senator Rick Scott told the "Fox News Sunday" program
that his party would not raise the debt ceiling "without structural
change" but gave no details.
Yellen has called Oct. 1 a critical date for U.S. government cash
flows, because of some $150 billion in payments due on the first day
of the 2022 fiscal year, including some investments in military
pension programs.
Meanwhile, the Treasury Department has already announced measures
such as suspending investments in employee health benefits funds to
preserve its borrowing authority.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey; additional reporting by David Lawder;
Editing by Chizu Nomiyama and Paul Simao)
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