Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said Wednesday the government will have exhausted its borrowing authority by Oct. 17, leaving the United States just $30 billion cash on hand to pay its bills.
That’s a slightly worse financial position than Treasury predicted last month and adds to the pressure on Congress to increase the government’s borrowing cap soon to avert a first-ever U.S. default on its obligations.In a letter to top congressional leaders, Lew warned that a repeat of the debt brinksmanship of 2011 could inflict great harm on the economy and that “if the government should ultimately become unable to pay all of its bills, the results could be catastrophic.”
The government reached its
$16.7 trillion debt limit in May. Since then, it has been using
“extraordinary measures” such as suspending U.S. investments in federal
employee trust funds to create about $300 billion in additional
borrowing room.
But on the 17th the government will be left with only its cash
cushion and daily receipts to pay its bills. Lew warned that before long
it would not be able to meet all of its obligations. Economists and
financial market experts warn that the stock market could plummet and
that investors would demand higher returns on Treasury notes, which
could raise interest rates and harm the economy.
A House-passed stopgap spending
measure pending before the Senate contains a GOP-backed provision that
would give Social Security recipients and bondholders priority in
receiving payments from the government.
Lew again rejected the idea.
“The United States should never
have to choose, for example, whether to pay Social Security to seniors,
pay benefits to our veterans, or make payments to state and local
jurisdictions and health care providers under Medicare and Medicaid,”
Mr. Lew said. “There is no way of knowing the damage any prioritization
plan would have on our economy and financial markets. It would represent
an irresponsible retreat from a core American value: We are a nation
that honors all of its commitments.”
Lew again warned that President Barack Obama would not negotiate with Republicans over the debt limit. source -Yahoo News
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