Factbox-Congress struggles over U.S. debt ceiling as deadline looms
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[September 30, 2021]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Democrats and
Republicans in the U.S. Senate blame each other for failing to move
forward so far on a temporary suspension of the $28.4 trillion debt
ceiling, in a political game of "chicken" with potentially dire economic
consequences.
The U.S. Treasury will exhaust its borrowing authority by Oct. 18 unless
the debt limit is raised, raising the danger of a default on the federal
debt.
After a failed Senate https://www.reuters.com/world/us/moment-truth-us-congress-government-funding-debt-biden-agenda-2021-09-27effort
to temporarily suspend the debt ceiling and avoid a government shutdown
after the federal fiscal year ends on Thursday, Democrats are working on
separate measures to address the borrowing limit and keep federal
agencies operating.
While a government funding measure would likely have broad bipartisan
support, a stand-alone debt ceiling measure could still fail in the face
of Senate Republican opposition.
WHOSE SPENDING IS IT ANYWAY?
Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer and Republican leader
Mitch McConnell have jousted repeatedly about whether debt has hit the
limit due to President Joe Biden's agenda or initiatives undertaken
during former President Donald Trump's term, including sweeping tax cuts
enacted in 2017.
The truth is that both parties have contributed to the run-up in debt
over the past few years. The tax cuts passed by a Republican-controlled
Congress early in Trump's presidency added about $1.8 trillion to the
nation's debt, according to Moody's Analytics. Both parties last year
agreed to pass about $3 trillion in spending meant to address the
COVID-19 pandemic. And Biden's Democrats early this year pushed through
another round of coronavirus relief worth about $1.9 trillion.
CATASTROPHIC CONSEQUENCES
A grim fate could be in store for the U.S. economy if the impasse leads
to default. The government relies on continued borrowing to pay interest
on its existing debt, and without authority to borrow more, the Treasury
could default.
A recent report by Moody's Analytics warns of a nearly 4% decline in
economic activity, the loss of almost 6 million jobs, an unemployment
rate of close to 9%, a sell-off in stocks that could wipe out $15
trillion in household wealth and a spike in interest rates on mortgages,
consumer loans and business debts.
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An early morning view of the Statue of Freedom at the U.S. Capitol
in Washington, DC, U.S., August 7, 2021. REUTERS/Ken Cedeno/File
Photo
Mindful of those risks, McConnell has said that while
he does believe the debt ceiling should be raised, the
responsibility for doing so lies wholly with Schumer and the
Democrats. Schumer has accused McConnell of political "sophistry"
and warned that Republicans could become the "party of default" if
worse comes to worse.
A RETURN TO 2011?
In 2011, months of partisan brinkmanship over the debt ceiling
prompted Standard & Poor's Corp to downgrade the U.S. government
credit rating for the first time in history.
An unsettled stock market saw its worst week since the 2008
financial crisis and the cost of debt rose as investors fled the
U.S. Treasury bond market. In the end, Congress agreed to raise what
was then a $16 trillion debt limit hours before a deadline set by
the Treasury.
OTHER SUSPENSIONS
The debt ceiling, originally intended to impose fiscal discipline
on lawmakers, has been changed by Congress 98 times since the end of
World War Two and 17 times since 2001, according to the
Congressional Research Service.
Most of the increases have been free of drama. But crisis erupted
in 2013, when Republicans opposed raising the ceiling in a bid to
undermine former President Barack Obama's signature Affordable Care
Act. That caused Fitch Ratings to place the U.S. government on a
negative rating watch.
The most recent debt limit suspension occurred in the Bipartisan
Budget Act of 2019, which suspended the limit until Aug. 1, 2021.
(Reporting by David Morgan; additional reporting by Richard Cowan;
Editing by Scott Malone, Cynthia Osterman and Jonathan Oatis)
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