16-05-2011, 08:21 AM
America is borrowing its way into big trouble!
May 16, 2011
Damage from debt default may be irrevocable: Geithner
US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
WASHINGTON: With the United States government about to hit its US$14.3 trillion (S$18 trillion) debt limit, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has warned of 'catastrophic' consequences and a new recession if Washington is not able to borrow more.
A divided Congress has run out of time to raise the debt limit before today's deadline, forcing Mr Geithner into an emergency reallocation of funds so the government can meet its obligations, including payments to US Treasury bond-holders.
Those measures are expected to give the government only until Aug 2 before it will start defaulting on payments including those on Treasury debt, an event that could trigger chaos in world financial markets.
'This would be an unprecedented event in American history. A default would inflict catastrophic, far-reaching damage on our nation's economy, significantly reducing growth and increasing unemployment,' Mr Geithner said, in a letter last Friday, to Democratic Senator Michael Bennet.
The Obama administration and lawmakers are battling over how to curb the mounting US debt, with Republicans refusing to increase the debt limit without deep spending cuts.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said last Thursday he wants 'significant' near-term cuts in federal agency budgets paired with longer-term reductions to programmes like Medicare and Medicaid in exchange for his support for an increase in the debt limit.
In some of his most stark language to lawmakers so far, Mr Geithner said a default or missed payments would not only increase borrowing costs for the US government but also for average Americans, businesses and local governments.
'An increase in Treasury rates would make it more costly for a family to buy a home, purchase a car or send a child to college,' he said.
'It would make it more expensive for an entrepreneur to borrow money to start a new business or invest in new products and equipment.'
The world's biggest economy is recovering only gradually after the 2007-09 financial crisis but some 13.7 million Americans are out of work and higher petrol and food prices are threatening to slow the recovery.
If Congress does not increase the borrowing cap by August, Mr Geithner will be forced to start choosing which payments to make first.
Missing or delaying payments on a host of obligations, including those to businesses for goods and services and bond payments to investors, would result in a massive and abrupt cut in federal spending and aggregate demand, the letter warned.
'The abrupt contraction would likely push us into a double-dip recession,' Mr Geithner said.
The US government bond market has so far remained calm about the risk of a default.
But Mr Geithner and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke have repeatedly urged Congress to act quickly to raise the debt limit.
'Even a short-term default could cause irrevocable damage to the American economy,' Mr Geithner noted, in response to a letter from Mr Bennet requesting an estimate of the consequences of failing to increase the limit.
Mr Geithner pointed out that raising the debt ceiling does not authorise new spending commitments.
'It simply allows the government to finance existing legal obligations that Congresses and presidents of both parties have made in the past.'
In response to Mr Geithner's letter, Mr Bennet said it was 'absolutely urgent and essential' that lawmakers draft a plan that 'materially reduces the deficit'.
'Playing politics with the debt limit would rattle the capital markets, blow an even bigger hole in our deficit and would likely throw our economy into another deep recession,' he said in an e-mailed statement.
The US government is borrowing approximately US$125 billion per month.
As of last Thursday, the country was US$38 billion below the debt ceiling.
REUTERS, BLOOMBERG
'This would be an unprecedented event in American history. A default would inflict catastrophic, far-reaching damage on our nation's economy, significantly reducing growth and increasing unemployment.' US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
May 16, 2011
Damage from debt default may be irrevocable: Geithner
US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
WASHINGTON: With the United States government about to hit its US$14.3 trillion (S$18 trillion) debt limit, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has warned of 'catastrophic' consequences and a new recession if Washington is not able to borrow more.
A divided Congress has run out of time to raise the debt limit before today's deadline, forcing Mr Geithner into an emergency reallocation of funds so the government can meet its obligations, including payments to US Treasury bond-holders.
Those measures are expected to give the government only until Aug 2 before it will start defaulting on payments including those on Treasury debt, an event that could trigger chaos in world financial markets.
'This would be an unprecedented event in American history. A default would inflict catastrophic, far-reaching damage on our nation's economy, significantly reducing growth and increasing unemployment,' Mr Geithner said, in a letter last Friday, to Democratic Senator Michael Bennet.
The Obama administration and lawmakers are battling over how to curb the mounting US debt, with Republicans refusing to increase the debt limit without deep spending cuts.
Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, a Kentucky Republican, said last Thursday he wants 'significant' near-term cuts in federal agency budgets paired with longer-term reductions to programmes like Medicare and Medicaid in exchange for his support for an increase in the debt limit.
In some of his most stark language to lawmakers so far, Mr Geithner said a default or missed payments would not only increase borrowing costs for the US government but also for average Americans, businesses and local governments.
'An increase in Treasury rates would make it more costly for a family to buy a home, purchase a car or send a child to college,' he said.
'It would make it more expensive for an entrepreneur to borrow money to start a new business or invest in new products and equipment.'
The world's biggest economy is recovering only gradually after the 2007-09 financial crisis but some 13.7 million Americans are out of work and higher petrol and food prices are threatening to slow the recovery.
If Congress does not increase the borrowing cap by August, Mr Geithner will be forced to start choosing which payments to make first.
Missing or delaying payments on a host of obligations, including those to businesses for goods and services and bond payments to investors, would result in a massive and abrupt cut in federal spending and aggregate demand, the letter warned.
'The abrupt contraction would likely push us into a double-dip recession,' Mr Geithner said.
The US government bond market has so far remained calm about the risk of a default.
But Mr Geithner and Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke have repeatedly urged Congress to act quickly to raise the debt limit.
'Even a short-term default could cause irrevocable damage to the American economy,' Mr Geithner noted, in response to a letter from Mr Bennet requesting an estimate of the consequences of failing to increase the limit.
Mr Geithner pointed out that raising the debt ceiling does not authorise new spending commitments.
'It simply allows the government to finance existing legal obligations that Congresses and presidents of both parties have made in the past.'
In response to Mr Geithner's letter, Mr Bennet said it was 'absolutely urgent and essential' that lawmakers draft a plan that 'materially reduces the deficit'.
'Playing politics with the debt limit would rattle the capital markets, blow an even bigger hole in our deficit and would likely throw our economy into another deep recession,' he said in an e-mailed statement.
The US government is borrowing approximately US$125 billion per month.
As of last Thursday, the country was US$38 billion below the debt ceiling.
REUTERS, BLOOMBERG
'This would be an unprecedented event in American history. A default would inflict catastrophic, far-reaching damage on our nation's economy, significantly reducing growth and increasing unemployment.' US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner
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