US government shutdown: what does it mean?
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[September 08, 2023]
(Reuters) - Large swaths of the U.S. government could
temporarily close on Oct. 1 if Congress does not approve spending bills
due to a dispute between far-right Republicans and other lawmakers.
Here are some facts about U.S. government shutdowns:
WHY WOULD THE GOVERNMENT SHUT DOWN?
Congress must allocate funding to 438 government agencies each fiscal
year, which ends on Sept. 30. If lawmakers don't pass those bills before
the new fiscal year starts, those agencies will be unable to continue
operating as normal.
There have been 20 shutdowns since the 1970s, according to the
Congressional Research Service. The most recent one was also the
longest, lasting 35 days between December 2018 and January 2019 due to a
dispute over border security.
Lawmakers often temporarily push that deadline back by extending
agencies' current funding levels in a "continuing resolution" so they
can continue negotiating.
WHAT IS THE IMPACT?
Hundreds of thousands of federal workers would be furloughed without pay
and a wide range of services could be disrupted, from passport
applications to trash pickup at national parks.
Other workers deemed "essential" would remain on the job, though they
also would not get paid. Services like mail delivery, tax collection and
U.S. debt payments would continue.
Shutdowns that last only a few days would have little practical impact,
particularly if they occur over a weekend, but the broader economy could
suffer if federal employees begin missing paychecks after two weeks.
A shutdown would directly reduce GDP growth by around 0.15 percentage
points for each week it lasts, according to Goldman Sachs, but growth
would rise by the same amount after the shutdown was resolved.
The 2018-2019 shutdown cost the economy about $3 billion, equal to 0.02%
of GDP according to the Congressional Budget Office.
WHAT FUNCTIONS ARE CONSIDERED 'ESSENTIAL'?
Each department and agency has a contingency plan to determine which
employees must keep working without pay.
The 2018-2019 shutdown furloughed roughly 800,000 of the federal
government's 2.2 million employees. The White House budget office did
not say how many would be affected in total this time.
The Department of Homeland Security said it would keep 227,000 of its
253,000 workers on the job, including border security agents and the
Coast Guard.
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A U.S. Capitol Police Officer walks a K-9 dog in front of the
Capitol amid talks over government funding, as the threat of an
October government shutdown looms on Capitol Hill in Washington,
U.S., September 6, 2023. REUTERS/Julia Nikhinson/File photo
The Department of Justice said in its 2021 contingency plan that 85%
of its 116,000 employees would be considered essential, including
prison staff and prosecutors. Criminal litigation would continue,
although most civil litigation cases would be paused.
Air travel would remain relatively unimpeded, but in previous
shutdowns the Transportation Security Administration has warned that
airport-security screeners could call in sick at an increased rate.
It is not clear whether the United States' 63 national parks would
remain open. During a shutdown in 2013, the Obama administration
shuttered parks due in part to safety concerns, losing an estimated
$500 million. In the 2018-19 shutdown the Trump administration kept
them open with public restrooms and information desks closed and
waste disposal halted. Some states, such as New York and Utah, paid
for their sites to stay open and staffed during the 2018-2019
shutdown.
The Internal Revenue Service has furloughed up to 90% of its staff
in the past but 100% of its employees are considered essential under
its current contingency plan.
All military personnel would remain working, but roughly 429,000
civilian Pentagon employees would be furloughed.
HOW IS THIS DIFFERENT FROM A DEBT LIMIT STANDOFF?
A shutdown happens when the U.S. government has not had more money
allocated to its budget by Congress.
A debt limit is a cap set by Congress on how much money the U.S.
government can borrow, which needs to be periodically raised.
Failure to do so could prevent the U.S. Treasury from paying its
debts. Unlike a government shutdown, a U.S. debt default would
likely have severe consequences, roiling global financial markets
and plunging the country into recession.
Sometimes Congress raises the debt ceiling quietly, and sometimes
lawmakers use the occasion to engage in a noisy debate over fiscal
policy before raising the cap at the last possible moment, as they
did in June.
(Reporting by Moira Warburton in Washington; Editing by Andy
Sullivan and Grant McCool)
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