Republican U.S. House Speaker McCarthy to pitch spending cuts on Wall St
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[April 17, 2023]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy
plans to make his case for cuts in federal spending to accompany a
lifting of the government's $31.4 trillion debt ceiling in a speech at
the New York Stock Exchange on Monday.
His speech comes as the federal government ticks closer to the moment
sometime this summer when it will no longer be able to meet its
financial obligations. Without action by the divided Congress, that
would trigger a historic default that would shake the U.S. and world
economies.
President Joe Biden's Democrats, who also control the Senate, have been
at loggerheads with Republicans for months over next steps on the limit,
with the White House insisting Congress lift the borrowing limit without
conditions, as it did three times under Biden's Republican predecessor,
Donald Trump.
The Republicans who control the House of Representatives this week will
try to unify around a proposal that would lift the limit to May 2024 --
as the next presidential election campaign ramps up -- in exchange for
sharp spending cuts. Such a proposal is unlikely to win the Democratic
support it would need to take effect.
McCarthy leads a fractious caucus that holds a narrow 222-213 majority,
including a sizeable contingent of hardline members who want sharp
spending cuts and dismiss the risks of failure to act on the debt
ceiling. So far House Republicans have not produced a proposed budget of
their own, a move that Biden contends would be a necessary starting
point for negotiations on spending.
"I don't know what we're negotiating. I don't know what they want,"
Biden told reporters on Saturday.
The White House last month proposed its own budget, which it said would
cut the nation's deficit by nearly $3 trillion over 10 years, though it
relied on increases in taxes on businesses and the wealthy, rather than
spending cuts, to do so.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office last month laid out a range
of options to address the debt, which showed that higher tax collections
would have significantly more impact than spending cuts.
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Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy
(R-CA) wields the speaker's gavel as members of Congress gather on
the House floor to attend U.S. President Joe Biden's State of the
Union address before a joint session of Congress in the House
Chamber at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, U.S., February 7, 2023.
REUTERS/Leah Millis/File Photo/File Photo
LIST OF OPTIONS
Republicans have been discussing spending cuts for programs ranging
from homeland security and law enforcement to health, education and
environmental initiatives. This could be done by freezing spending
at 2022 levels or allowing annual increases of just 1% for a decade,
which would not keep up with inflation or population growth and thus
effectively cut funding.
Such budgeting would not touch the main drivers of the debt
Republicans complain about -- the Social Security and Medicare
retirement and healthcare programs that are projected to nearly
double in cost over the next 10 years, according to the CBO.
The closer Congress gets to the "X-date" when the federal government
will no longer be able to pay its bills, the more nervous investors
will become about the economic outlook. The last prolonged standoff
over the debt ceiling, in 2011, led to a historic cut in the U.S.
government's credit rating, which rattled markets and raised
borrowing costs.
House Republicans are also mulling reforms to the debt ceiling,
which has utterly failed at its intended purpose of restraining U.S.
budget deficits.
Currently, the debt limit is statutorily set at a specific dollar
amount -- now at $31.4 trillion -- though Congress sometimes
suspends the limit, meaning it does not apply for a set period of
time. House Republicans now say they are looking at indexing the
limit to gross domestic product.
Shai Akabas, economic policy director at the Bipartisan Policy
Center, a centrist think tank in Washington, said that "such an
approach would be quite challenging" to implement.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan, additional reporting by Steve Holland;
Editing by Scott Malone and Chizu Nomiyama)
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