Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen speaks at a Bureau of Engraving and Printing facility in Fort Worth, Texas, on Dec. 8, 2022.
By JIM TANKERSLEY and ALAN RAPPEPORT
The United States hit its debt limit Thursday, prompting the Treasury Department to begin using a series of accounting maneuvers to ensure the federal government can keep paying its bills before what’s expected to be a protracted fight over whether to increase the borrowing cap.
In a letter to Congress, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the government would begin using what is known as extraordinary measures to prevent the nation from breaching its statutory debt limit and asked lawmakers to raise or suspend the cap so that the government can continue meeting its financial obligations.
“The period of time that extraordinary measures may last is subject to considerable uncertainty, including the challenges of forecasting the payments and receipts of the U.S. government months into the future,” Yellen said. “I respectfully urge Congress to act promptly to protect the full faith and credit of the United States.”
The milestone of reaching the $31.4 trillion debt cap is a product of decades of tax cuts and increased government spending by both Republicans and Democrats. But at a moment of heightened partisanship and divided government, it is also a warning of the entrenched battles that are set to dominate Washington, and that could end in economic shock.
Newly empowered House Republicans have vowed that they will not raise the borrowing limit again unless President Joe Biden agrees to steep cuts in federal spending. Biden has said he will not negotiate conditions for a debt-limit increase, arguing that lawmakers should lift the cap with no strings attached to cover spending that previous Congresses authorized.
Treasury officials estimate the measures that they began using Thursday will enable the government to keep paying federal workers, Medicare providers, investors who hold U.S. debt and other recipients of federal money at least until early June. But economists warn that the nation risks a financial crisis and other immediate economic pain if lawmakers do not raise the limit before the Treasury Department exhausts its ability to buy more time.
The episode has prompted fears in part because of the lessons both parties have taken from more than a decade of debt-limit fights. A bout of brinkmanship in 2011 between House Republicans and President Barack Obama nearly ended in the United States defaulting on its debt before Obama agreed to a set of caps on future spending increases in exchange for lifting the limit.
Most Democrats have solidified in their position that negotiations over the debt limit only enhance the risks of economic calamity by encouraging Republicans to use it as leverage. That is particularly true of Biden, who successfully stared down Republicans and won an increase in 2021 with no stipulations.
Newly elected Republicans, emboldened by anger among their base and conservative advocacy groups over past failures to exact concessions for raising the limit, have pledged not to let that happen again.
In reality, both parties have approved policies that fueled the growth in government borrowing. Republicans repeatedly passed tax cuts when they controlled the White House over the past 20 years. Democrats have expanded spending programs that have often not been fully offset by tax increases. Both parties have voted for large economic aid packages to help people and businesses endure the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic recession.
Federal spending declined from its pandemic high in 2022, reaching nearly $6 trillion in the fiscal year, or just under 24% of the economy. The federal budget deficit, which is the shortfall between what the United States spends and what it takes in through taxes and other revenue, topped $1 trillion for the year. That is a decline from the past two years as emergency pandemic spending expired, though the Biden administration predicts the deficit will rise again in the current fiscal year.
Many House Republicans call the current spending levels and the debt load a threat to economic growth. They have not yet released formal demands for raising the limit, but have pushed to tie it to large spending reductions and passage of a budget that balances over the course of a decade.
“The American people rightfully recognize that maintaining Washington’s status quo, which runs up massive deficits and adds trillions to our national debt, is unsustainable,” Rep. Jason Smith, R-Mo., chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, said in a statement. “President Biden should be spending this time working with House Republicans to address the debt ceiling in a way that imposes some fiscal sanity. Otherwise, the president is simply scheduling America’s next debt crisis.”
Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, struck a more conciliatory tone Thursday, predicting the limit would be raised in the first half of this year.
“In the end, I think the important thing to remember is that America must never default on its debt,” McConnell said in Kentucky. “It never has and it never will. But we will end up in some kind of negotiation with the administration over what are the circumstances or conditions under which the debt ceiling be raised.”
He added: “I would not be concerned with a financial crisis.”
White House officials say it is inappropriate to attach any conditions to raising the limit. They also say Republicans are not serious about reducing deficits, pointing to the first bill the new House took up this month. That legislation would cut new funding for the IRS to crack down on wealthy tax cheats, which the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office estimated would generate $180 billion over 10 years. The bill to repeal that funding would add more than $100 billion in additional budget deficits over the next decade, according to the office’s estimates.
“They’re threatening to kill millions of jobs and 401(k) plans by trying to hold the debt limit hostage unless they can cut Social Security, cut Medicare, cut Medicaid,” Karine Jean-Pierre, the White House press secretary, told reporters Wednesday.
Congress still has a few months to find a way to raise the limit. The Treasury is expected to continue employing its extraordinary measures for as long as possible. But the economic toll could mount the closer the country comes to running out of cash, which could result in the United States being unable to pay its bondholders and defaulting on its debt. In 2011, as the standoff escalated, investors grew jittery, driving up borrowing costs for businesses and homebuyers.
On Thursday, Yellen began what is likely to be a monthslong process of using the extraordinary measures to delay a default. In her letter, she said she is initiating a “debt issuance suspension period” that will last through June 5 and that Treasury will no longer be fully investing the portion of the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund that is not immediately required to pay beneficiaries. Treasury investments in the Postal Service Retiree Health Benefits Fund are also being suspended.
Yellen will most likely have to take additional steps if the stalemate drags on. Determining the actual “X-date,” when the United States will not be able to pay all its bills on time, is difficult because it depends on how fast tax receipts are coming in and the performance of the economy.
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