Congress has no choice but to raise the debt ceiling
Things would get ugly in a very short time. The US economy would grind to a halt. Financial markets would be disrupted. The world would think we'd gone mad.
The scramble is on until, say, mid-February, when failure to extend the nation's debt ceiling will result in the government running out of cash. The government actually hit the debt ceiling on Dec. 31, but the Treasury Department has been in the process of exercising "extraordinary measures," including borrowing upwards of $200 billion, to keep the military and all the non-agencies at work.
Without a deal by Feb. 15, the government may face a shutdown that would force truly difficult decisions. Like whose bills to the government would get paid. Whose salaries would get postponed.
And there is a chance that the United States government would default on its debt, something that's never happened. Though it's come close.
The mid-February deadline isn't etched in stone. It's an estimate, made by the Bipartisan Policy Center, of when the government would literally run out of cash. The think tank calls the date "the X date."
When precisely the X date would occur is still a guess. But we're talking days around Feb. 15. At the very least there would be annoyance. Here's what we mean: The Internal Revenue Service said Tuesday that the drawn-out talks to get a tax deal done is forcing the IRS to delay processing of tax returns until Jan. 31.
The reason, according to USA Today's John Waggoner: "Programming IRS computers and printing forms and instructions were delayed by congressional wrangling over the fiscal cliff -- a combination of tax hikes and spending cuts that briefly became law on Jan. 1."
At worst, once the X date is reached, pandemonium would reign.
It's likely the financial markets would tumble badly. (Right now, however, the markets are assuming stress but not disaster.)
In a working paper, the policy center posits that the government could opt to pay some bills but not others. Or it could wait until it has enough cash to pay a day's bills.
The Bipartisan Policy Center is a think tank founded by former Senators Bob Dole, George Mitchell, Howard Baker and Tom Daschle.
So, let's say the government runs into a cash crisis on or about Feb. 15. Over the next month, it will probably take in roughly $270 billion and spend about $450 billion, the policy center says. If the debt ceiling is not raised and the government can't borrow the cash, the Treasury has to decide how bills will get paid.
If the government decided to pay some bills and not others, the policy center offers this scenario.
If you pay a month's worth of:
- Interest on Treasury securities -- $38.1 billion
- Income tax refunds to individuals -- $85.5 billion
- Medicare/Medicaid -- $72.5 billion
- Social Security benefits -- $61.1 billion
- Military pay and retirement -- $13.2 billion
- Unemployment insurance benefits -- $6.1 billion
The government would have to forgo payments to:
- Defense vendors -- $28.8 billion
- Veterans benefits -- $4.2 billion
- Federal salaries and benefits $19.9 billion
- Department of Education costs (Pell grants, special education payments and the like) -- $16.8 billion
- Food/nutrition and temporary assistance to needy families -- $10.1 billion
- Civil Service retirement -- $5 billion
- Health and human services grants -- $8 billion
- Supplemental Security Income -- $3.4 billion
- Other spending -- $79 billion. This would include expenses incurred by the Department of Justice and the FBI; the Department of Energy; the Federal Highway Administration; the Federal Aviation Administration; the Environment Protection Agency and FEMA and the national flood insurance program.
There's another scenario the policy center offered. The government doesn't pay out income tax refunds.
The government pays:
- Interest on Treasury securities -- $38.1 billion
- Medicare/Medicaid -- $72.5 billion
- Social Security benefits -- $61.1 billion
- Military pay and retirement -- $13.2 billion
- Veterans benefits -- $4.2 billion
- Defense vendor payments -- $28.8 billion
- Federal salaries and benefits -- $19.9 billion
- Unemployment insurance benefits -- $6.2 billion
- Civil servce retirement -- $5.0 billion
- Food and nutrition and temporary assistance to needy families -- $10.1 billion
- Department of Education (Pell grants, Special Education) -- $16.8 billion
The government forgoes payments on:
- Income tax refunds to individuals -- $85.5 billion
- Health and human services grants -- $8 billion
- Supplemental Security Income -- $3.4 billion
- Other spending -- $79 billion. Again, these would include expenses incurred by the Department of Justice and the FBI; the Department of Energy; the Federal Highway Administration; the Federal Aviation Administration; the Environment Protection Agency and FEMA and the national flood insurance program.
And that's potentially just the first month of the crisis. No matter how you look at it, it's not a pretty picture.
The consequences, the policy center says, effectively mean an immediate 39% cut in federal spending. It means handling all payments for important and popular programs, including national defense, Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, becomes impossible.
The economic disruption is huge and accompanied by wild uncertainty.
"Everything else is informed speculation," as Derek Thompson wrote on the Atlantic.com on Tuesday, "but you don't need a creative mind to guess that a stock market that loathes surprises would positively freak at the first-ever default of the United States government."
In an earlier version of the post, the scenarios above were described as occuring in the course of a day's government spending. The post should have said the scenarios were set up using a month's spending. The post now includes what the government would expect to receive and spend if the debt ceiling were simply lifted.
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We need to bankrupt our country, do away with the federal government, give rights back to the states and people and fire every fricken politicion in DC. Debt limit??? How about quit spending like a drunkin sailer and giving money to Egypt, Syria and every other country that hates us.
OBama is an idiot!!!!
Well trust a crook (Geithner the tax evader) to keep breaking the law. Now he is borrowing money above the debt ceiling limit which is totally illegal.
So course as all our Washington people are crooks nothing is going to be done. The terrorists have won and we are all crooks now and financial terrorists and better than the Arab (is that correct to say??) terrorists as we can kill from above with no trial , judge , jury or due process of law with our robot drones just like God can with his angels of death.
So why doesn't Geithner is keep borrowing money illegally forever and forever Amen.
Quote
The government actually hit the debt ceiling on Dec. 31, but the Treasury Department has been in the process of exercising "extraordinary measures," including borrowing upwards of $200 billion, to keep the military and all the non-agencies at work.
End Quote
LOL How pathetic , these Obama backed media stooges are.
Let's see, we are almost completely underwater in debt - the solution ?
Borrow MORE !!
To simplify for thelefty , cretins.
You borrowed $300,000 for your home. It's now worth $150,000. The solution ?
BORROW ANOTHER $100,000 !!
MSN (Mostly State News_
NBC (News by Commies)
Should be lined up and shot as traitors.
The Voter only has to look at themselves for our mess. You get what you voted for - A president that has no intention of cutting spending, A senate Speaker that refuses to live by a budget - or even debate one, a minority speaker of the house who insists on pushing for more taxes, voters who rate congress in single digits and then votes them back in office, a president that campaigns on increaseing revenues by $800B and then demands $1.6T etc. You got what you voted for - there was no hidden agenda - This is what socializm is all about
This sky is going to fall down. let it fall. Unfortunately we do not seems to suffer from these things. For once, just once, I hope sky falls down. It will be a call on American people that you cannot spend endlessly what you do not have, you cannot fight wars because your wife's grandma is worried about rat on a farm in a country most people even do not know where it is.
Out of control spending? Out of control requirements? Or out of control optimism of five-ten years ago? Out of control politics? Short-term Economy, Long-Term debt, Short-Term Spending Increases, Long-Term Tax Increases and Spending Responsibility Cuts, sorry CNBC, you been watching FOX news too much.
Small Business Increases actually hurt the Economy in a Recession; total your numbers.
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