FINANCE
& TAX
Yellen says U.S. will hit debt limit Thursday,
warns of ‘irreparable harm’
The Treasury has only a finite amount of time it can
use extraordinary measures to avoid a default.
By ZACHARY
WARMBRODT
01/13/2023
12:28 PM EST
Updated:
01/13/2023 01:44 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/01/13/janet-yellen-debt-limit-00077898
The U.S. is
expected to reach its borrowing limit next Thursday, forcing the government to
start using “extraordinary measures” to prevent a default on its debt, Treasury
Secretary Janet Yellen told congressional leaders Friday.
The move
will accelerate the debate in Congress about how to pass a debt limit increase.
The stakes are high because conservative House Republicans have made clear they
want to attach government spending cuts to any such legislation now that the
party is in the majority, against the wishes of the Biden administration.
The Biden
administration is rejecting any such conditions. “There’s going to be no
negotiation over it,” White House spokesperson Karine Jean-Pierre told
reporters Friday. “This is something that must be done.”
'No
negotiation’: White House calls on Congress to raise the debt limit
The
Treasury only has a finite amount of time to avoid a default using
extraordinary measures — in this case, suspending investments in certain
government retirement funds. Estimates are that the “X date” could be hit
around the middle of this year. Yellen said it is unlikely that cash and
extraordinary measures will be exhausted before early June.
“Failure to
meet the government’s obligations would cause irreparable harm to the U.S.
economy, the livelihoods of all Americans, and global financial stability,” she
said.
Yellen’s
letter formally kicked off what’s expected to be the most contentious debt
ceiling battle in history, even after a series of recent episodes where
Republican opposition brought the U.S. to the brink of being unable to pay its
bills.
The stakes
are higher than ever in the wake of the House GOP’s protracted fight over
whether to elect Kevin McCarthy as speaker to run the chamber. The California
Republican’s fraught path to the speakership empowered hardline conservatives
who want to use the debt limit to extract spending cuts — an approach McCarthy
has endorsed.
The fight
is a looming cloud over the economy because the market for U.S. Treasury
securities is a bedrock of the global financial system, and volatility could
impact lending products like mortgages. White House officials have started
eyeing moderate Republicans who might be helpful in a deal to raise the debt
limit.
The debt
ceiling is the legal limit in which the U.S. can borrow to pay for its existing
obligations, including Social Security, Medicare and military salaries. The
current limit is nearly $31.4 trillion.
A missed
government debt payment carries significant risk, though Wall Street analysts
are split on whether this current episode will cause economic armageddon.
Some
analysts warn that market turbulence could ensue even if the U.S. doesn’t
technically default but is forced to use unprecedented maneuvers to avoid
missing payments.
“In all the
previous debt ceiling episodes, I always felt like at the end of the day, I
understood the need for the theatrics, but I could see a landing zone for how
it gets resolved,” said Elliot Hentov, head of policy research at State Street
Global Advisors. “Here, I don’t see that yet, and it makes me quite
uncomfortable.”
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