Explainer
US debt ceiling deal: what has to happen now to
get it passed?
Lawmakers are scrambling to push through
Biden-McCarthy deal by 5 June to avoid default disaster – what is the process?
Mary Yang
Tue 30 May
2023 17.44 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/may/30/us-debt-ceiling-process-deal-vote-house-senate
The United
States has days before it runs out of time to pay its bills and avoid a
first-ever national default. Washington lawmakers are scrambling to push
through a deal that would temporarily suspend the US debt limit, averting a potential
disaster for the domestic and global economy.
The debt
ceiling, which caps the amount of debt the US can hold, currently sits at
$31.4tn. The US hit that limit in January. Since then, the treasury has taken
“extraordinary measures” to prevent default.
Last week,
the treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, warned lawmakers that the US must pay its
debts by 5 June – at which point the government would default.
The deal on
the table
Over the
weekend, negotiators for Joe Biden and the House speaker, Kevin McCarthy,
reached a tentative deal to suspend the debt limit and avoid a debt default.
The clock
then began for members of the House, who had 72 hours to review the deal and
pass it through a floor vote.
Then
there’s a vote
The
powerful House rules committee meets to review the deal, called the Fiscal
Responsibility Act of 2023, on Tuesday afternoon. The deal is expected to go to
a chamber vote on Wednesday.
If passed
by a simple majority in the House, the bill would then move to the Senate for
another review, which could take days. The Senate majority leader, Chuck
Schumer, told senators to be prepared to vote on Friday and potentially over
the weekend, days before the 5 June deadline.
Once it
moves through both chambers of Congress, the bill then goes to the president’s
desk for his signature.
What are
its chances of getting through?
While
lawmakers have expressed confidence that the bill would successfully get past
Congress, some hardline Republicans have signaled they will not sign the deal.
Representative
Chip Roy of Texas, a member of the rules committee, has urged fellow lawmakers
to vote no on the deal.
“This is
not a deal that we should be taking,” Roy told Fox News’ Glenn Beck on Tuesday.
What’s in
the deal?
If passed,
the deal would suspend the US debt limit through 1 January 2025, well past the
next US presidential election, which is in November 2024. But suspending the
debt limit is a temporary measure, and the US would need to bring down the
national debt or raise the ceiling by the new deadline.
The deal
would keep non-defense spending roughly the same for fiscal year 2024 and raise
it by 1% in fiscal year 2025.
The bill
would also place new restrictions on Snap benefits, limiting the number of
individuals eligible for food stamps. Unspent emergency aid related to the
Covid-19 pandemic, totaling about $30bn, will also be returned to the
government.
What
happens if the US credit score drops?
A national
default would probably tank the US credit rating, currently at AAA, the highest
status. A lower credit rating makes it more risky for international lenders and
costly for individuals living in the US to take out loans.
The last
time the US reached the brink of a national default was 2011. After that, one
credit rating agency, S&P, downgraded the US’s credit rating, citing
troubled policymaking in Washington. That sent markets tumbling, sending
shockwaves through the global economy, and made it more expensive for ordinary
consumers seeking to buy a house or a car.
What’s
next?
Concessions
had to be made on both sides of the aisle. Biden and McCarthy will need to
assuage members of their party ahead of a major election year, in which both
are seeking another term.
“We have
learned from past debt limit impasses that waiting until the last minute to
suspend or increase the debt limit can cause serious harm to business and
consumer confidence, raise short-term borrowing costs for taxpayers, and
negatively impact the credit rating of the United States,” Yellen wrote in a
letter to McCarthy on Friday.
Failing to
increase the debt limit “would cause severe hardship to American families, harm
our global leadership position, and raise questions about our ability to defend
our national security interests”, Yellen added.
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