What is the US Debt Limit Ceiling?

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In summary: Yes, the media spun the Republicans as the inflexible ones, but the truth is that it was more like 90%-10%, with the Republicans giving almost everything. Obama's only compromise was on how much more to tax the rich and at what threshold. He was completely unwilling to even discuss, much less compromise other major aspects of the fiscal cliff negotiations that Republicans wanted to deal with:-Spending cuts (despite saying he wanted a "balanced approach", the result was actually increased spending)-Social Security/Medicare reform
  • #36
ImaLooser said:
That's true. I was being loose. Actually defaulting on the debt isn't going to happen. But whatever they did would be highly embarrassing and bad for the credit rating. One of the US main assets is its reputation for fiscal honesty. A great deal of money is invested here for that reason, a situation greatly to the advantage to the US, and jeopardizing that could very well lead to catastrophe.

I think the policy resulting in borrowing over a trillion dollars a year should be the focus of embarrassment. That policy is guaranteed to cause eventual catastrophe, unlike one that stops additional borrowing.
 
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  • #37
ImaLooser said:
The debt ceiling thing is purely a political maneuver. Congress passes a budget which REQUIRES the executive to spend large sums of money, considerably more than the income. Congress orders the government to run at a (very large) deficit. Congress then denies the executive the power to borrow, which is the only reasonable way to finance the deficit.

Greg Bernhardt said:
The Senate hasn't passed a budget in over three years
http://www.politifact.com/ohio/stat...oehner-says-senate-dems-havent-passed-budget/

russ_watters said:
But they have been passing spending laws, if not an actual budget. So both are Congessional problems. Congress mandates the spending but not the borrowing authority, even though it knows it is needed.

It all smacks of a group that has seemed to reach a point where it's impossible for them to do their job.

Passing a budget/passing spending bills and then refusing to authorize the government to obtain the money necessary to execute that budget is just asinine. Just on principle, a government shutdown for that reason would be worse than a government shutdown because Congress couldn't agree on a budget.

But, shutting down government because Congress can't agree on a budget is still a bad thing. One of Congress's key duties is to pass a budget and keep government running. Individual members can pass the blame back and forth, but the bottom line would be that Congress failed to do its job.

And the solution Congress comes up for not being able to do its job (pass a budget) is to not do its job (keep government running)? If that's the solution, at least scrap that stupid requirement to include which part of the Constitution authorizes the bill and instead include in the introduction of each bill the statement, "Us being idiots... "

The important thing is to get something passed that's relatively close to being balanced. If the taxes required to do that are too high, then people will feel that in their wallets and you're going to see quite a few liberal Congressmen bounced out of office. If the services provided are too low, people will feel that, too, and quite a few conservative Congressmen will get bounced out of office.

If the budget is close to being balanced (i.e. - realistic), you'll get some type of equilibrium created by people's opinions. The only long term damage that can be done is with budget deficits where people won't feel the pain for years.
 
  • #38


russ_watters said:
Fire and brimstone predictions are overblown. As I posted in the other thread (perhaps they should be merged...), the deadline has actually already come and gone and contingency plans have already started and few people have even noticed. The further we go, the more contingency plans get put in place, but we are a long, long way from default. http://www.nbcnews.com/business/us-treasury-take-steps-avoid-hitting-debt-ceiling-monday-1C7662780

And yes, one of those contingency plans could be a partial government shutdown.

Obama's flip-flop on the issue (his position was precisely opposite of now, when he was on the other side of the fence) is probably a reflection of:
1. Even as ideologically driven as he is, he's more political than principled.
2. He knows that he has a lot to lose politically from this. Fortunately for him, he's going against a weak opponent in Boehner

Based on previous experience and predictions, we can probably operate under various contingency actions for at least 3 months: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_debt-ceiling_crisis

A partial government shutdown means that the government would no longer be meeting it's obligations and would be in default. And while contingency plans may help explain how we are going to manage our default, it would still be a default. And what happens depends how how the bond markets react to a default.

Maybe the bond market brushes the default aside, or maybe the last one out of the t-bill is a rotten egg. We don't know. It's a crazy risk to take.

In my opinion, the bond market is viewing this as nothing more than political theater, and it believes the US will raise its debt limit. But at the same time, it opens itself up to the risk of being surprised.
 
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  • #39


SixNein said:
A partial government shutdown means that the government would no longer be meeting it's obligations and would be in default.

False.

You can shut down some parts of the government and still pay interest on notes and bonds while rolling over debt due. If you do that, you are not in default.
 
  • #40


Locrian said:
False.

You can shut down some parts of the government and still pay interest on notes and bonds while rolling over debt due. If you do that, you are not in default.

The government is obligated by law to fund the things it will no longer be able to fund due to lack of funds. Thus the government goes into default on its obligations. How the government manages the default is in the details of who continues to get paid and who doesn't.

Suppose the government defaults but continues to pay interest on its bonds. Bond holders are faced with the political reality that their now in direct competition with granny's SSI check or some soldier's paycheck, and bond holders may lose that political battle in the long run.
 
  • #41
russ_watters said:
The embarrassing one for Obama would be a partial government shutdown.

The Gingrich government shutdown cost the Rs some seats in Congress. The will hesitate to do that again.
 
  • #42


SixNein said:
A partial government shutdown means that the government would no longer be meeting it's obligations and would be in default.
No, the two things have nothing to do with each other. We had a partial government shutdown in 1995 and didn't default.

A partial government shutdown means shutting down government offices funded by discretionary spending: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_federal_government_shutdown_of_1995_and_1996

And while contingency plans may help explain how we are going to manage our default, it would still be a default.
No it isn't. We're not in default now, are we?

A default is completely unnecessary. Debt service is a relatively small part of the budget and currently we are borrowing 40% of the budget so we'd be able to fund 60% of spending without a debt deal. The biggest risk is a halt to Social Security payments.

Your understanding of the issue is severely wrong.

[edit2] I'm really not certain if you do understand and are trolling or if you really are confused. Let me be more explicit about it:

Since we are currently borrowing 40% of our spending, if the debt ceiling is not raised, we could still spend 60% of what we spend now. Here's what it gets spent on:

er%20Spending%203%|Interest%207%&chtt=Federal%20Spending%20for%20United%20States%20-%20FY%202013.png


Now Geitner, not being an idiot, would likely not do something self-destructive like "default" on debt service payments, which at 7% of the budget should not be in danger. In order of what I think is likely:

1. Shutting down the national parks, etc. (partial government shutdown) = not a "default"/not a disaster/happened before.
2. Ground the military. (also not a "default")
3. Delay "entitlement" spending such as social security checks by a week. (also not a "default")

"Entitlement" spending would have the biggest direct impact of course. And it would be unavoidable since it is such a huge fraction of the government. But that's not a "default" either. It would impact people but not have a major impact our financial stature, unlike a default which would likely cause an instant collapse of our economy.
 
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  • #43
ImaLooser said:
The Gingrich government shutdown cost the Rs some seats in Congress. The will hesitate to do that again.

Republicans lost 8 seats in the House and gained 2 seats in the Senate. Republicans still retained their majority in both the House and the Senate. I don't think that would give them all that much reason to hesitate.

On the other hand, that was also the best possible scenario for Republicans. Both the House and Senate passed a budget, but Clinton vetoed it.

That's an entirely different scenario than Congress being unable to create a budget bill at all. The President is never put on the spot to sign or veto the bill because it never makes it to his desk in the first place.

If the best possible scenario didn't turn out well, the worst possible scenario (House Republicans unable to agree among themselves on a budget bill) surely can't turn out well.
 
  • #44


russ_watters said:
The biggest risk is a halt to Social Security payments.
Let's clarify: SS is paid for by payroll taxes and cannot add to our country's deficit. If the obstructionists in Congress want to put SS payments at risk, they would be thoroughly voted out of office in the next election. The people who rely on SS for their incomes aren't all liberals or moderates. There are lots of Republican voters who rely on SS to keep body and soul together,and they will be severely ticked off if these political games threaten the meager income that they have paid for all their lives.
 
  • #45


Failing to pay Social Security retirement benefits and/or other federal pension benefits wouldn't be a default?

Perhaps not in the sense of loans the government has taken, but these are surely legal obligations the government has committed itself to and they are surely obligations the government has already received money for in one way or another (either by retirees paying into Social Security during their working career or as a deferred part of workers compensation in the case of retiree benefits).
 
  • #46


SixNein said:
The government is obligated by law to fund the things it will no longer be able to fund due to lack of funds. Thus the government goes into default on its obligations. How the government manages the default is in the details of who continues to get paid and who doesn't.

Suppose the government defaults but continues to pay interest on its bonds. Bond holders are faced with the political reality that their now in direct competition with granny's SSI check or some soldier's paycheck, and bond holders may lose that political battle in the long run.

There appears to be some disagreement over the definition of the word "default". So let's be clear: you default if you don't pay your debts. If the government pays the interest on its debt and either rolls over standing debt or pays it, then it is not in default.

It's that simple.
 
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  • #47


turbo said:
There are lots of Republican voters who rely on SS to keep body and soul together,and they will be severely ticked off if these political games threaten the meager income that they have paid for all their lives.

Agreed; many US citizens wrongly believe they have "paid for" their social security. Of course, SS is a pay-go system that transfers money from workers to retirees (and the disabled), but neither party can count on people being aware of this.

The good people of this forum should work to educate others as to how SS finances actually work.
 
  • #48


BobG said:
Failing to pay Social Security retirement benefits and/or other federal pension benefits wouldn't be a default?

Failing to pay interest on SS trust fund debt would be a default. Debt due can be rolled over. Choosing not to pay SS benefits, if done correctly, would not be a default, as SS is not a funded plan.

Pension benefits are supposed to be funded, and so, if funded appropriately, wouldn't be impacted one way or another. In reality they probably would be. (Haven't they been drawing from them for months now? Someone clarify if you know the details)
 
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  • #49


russ_watters said:
No, the two things have nothing to do with each other. We had a partial government shutdown in 1995 and didn't default.

But that's because the nature of the shutdown was fundamentally different. A budget induced shutdown is a disagreement on future obligations that the government should or shouldn't take on.As I have been saying, this type of shutdown is in a different galaxy than what we are currently discussing. The shutdown via debt limit would be a default. The government would not have the funds to fund all of its existing obligations. So it is forced to start shutting things down despite its obligations to fund them.
A default is completely unnecessary. Debt service is a relatively small part of the budget and currently we are borrowing 40% of the budget so we'd be able to fund 60% of spending without a debt deal. The biggest risk is a halt to Social Security payments.

You just contradicted yourself. Funding 60% of our bills isn't 100% now is it? Thus the government defaults.

Now Geitner, not being an idiot, would likely not do something self-destructive like "default" on debt service payments, which at 7% of the budget should not be in danger. In order of what I think is likely:

1. Shutting down the national parks, etc. (partial government shutdown) = not a "default"/not a disaster/happened before.
2. Ground the military. (also not a "default")
3. Delay "entitlement" spending such as social security checks by a week. (also not a "default")

"Entitlement" spending would have the biggest direct impact of course. And it would be unavoidable since it is such a huge fraction of the government. But that's not a "default" either. It would impact people but not have a major impact our financial stature, unlike a default which would likely cause an instant collapse of our economy.

And here is where you are wrong. These are defaults!

The government has the legal obligation to fund these things because it said it would do it. It passed a budget, and it said we're going to pay xyz on this or that. The bill comes due, and the government is unable to pay. It's a default.

Again, you people confuse this situation with a budget induced shutdown. In a budget induced shutdown, some programs may or may not be renewed in the future budget that congress is having trouble passing. In such a situation, the programs will be funded until it expires as per the contract the government agreed to in its previous budget. So when that contract expires, the entity receiving the funds has been fully paid off. It will shutdown unless the government takes on new obligations (ie: renews the contract or whatever) in the new budget.

In the above situation, there is no default because the government paid what it said it would pay.

In the situation of the debt limit, congress passed the budget agreeing to take out all of these contracts. The bill comes due, and the government doesn't have enough funds to cover all of its obligations. Thus, things will still get shutdown but due to default. The government is legally obligated to pay these things, it simply can't raise enough money to do so.

As for consequences to a default, I have no clue how the bond market will react. The government is saying ok, if we default we'll continue paying you bond holders interest. In reality, we are essentially debating about throwing a torch in the middle of a bond market and hopping it doesn't catch on fire. There really is no other way of looking at it. It's pure insanity.
 
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  • #50


Locrian said:
False.

You can shut down some parts of the government and still pay interest on notes and bonds while rolling over debt due. If you do that, you are not in default.

Let me try a different approach... because my current explanation is getting absolutely nowhere.

I take out a cable subscription with a cable company.
I sign on the dotted line that I agree to pay x amount a month for a year.
In three months, I can no longer afford to pay x amount.
I default on my obligation.
The cable company shuts down my service (amongst other things).

The same situation is occurring with the debt limit. The government signed on the dotted line that it would pay x amount over a certain period of time to various different parties. These parties can be anything from bond holders to granny waiting on her SSI check. If the government is unable to make payments to meet its obligations, it defaults.

People are confusing this with a budget induced shutdown. In such a situation...

I take out a cable subscription with a cable company.
I sign on the dotted line that I'll agree to pay x amount for a year.
I pay x amount for a year.
I do not renew the contract and thus I"ll lose my service unless I change my mind.
 
  • #51


I'm surprised by the confusion this is causing. The difference is simply that some spending is legally obligated contracts to third parties and can't be unilaterally canceled by the government, while other spending can be unilaterally cancelled. If you can just change your mind and not spend (say you delay buying a car for a year), that's not a "default".

Expansion, with three broad categories:

1. Discretionary spending. By definition; at the government's discretion. It is passed annually in a budget and can be (and often is) changed mid-year...usually increases, but it can also be decreased. Simply with a few strokes of a pen.

2. "Mandatory" spending. This is for "entitlements". The word "mandatory" is a reference to the fact that this spending doesn't have to be approved annually, but rather is long-term programs that automatically do their thing unless changes are made. Unless changes are made. So the same legality applies to these as to discretionary spending: The government can change or cancel these programs whenever it wants.

3. Debt obligations. These are legally binding financial contracts (loans) with 3rd parties that the government can't unilaterally cancel: you can delay buying a car (#1) but you can't delay payment on a car you already own. The people who own the loan have to agree to delay the payment.

Failure to pay #3 is a "default". Failure to fulfill a financial contract. #1 and #2 are the government simply changing its own spending intentions and making different choices. They can't be a "default" because they aren't a legally binding contract to anyone but themselves.

Failure to pay #3 is a disaster. Our debt supports our currency. Failure to pay interest on the debt immediately impacts the value of our currency, similar to the way a bank failure wipes out bank account value.

Failure to pay #1 and #2 is not a disaster. They would reduce the GDP in the same way cancelling any spending reduces the GDP. There is economic "harm", but no currency collapse.

Ultimately a label is just a label, but when someone says "a default would be a disaster", the variation in impact between one interpretation and the other is vast. By the looser definition, we've already defaulted and the "disaster" is so minor that few people are even aware it happened.
 
  • #52


Sixnein,
While there certainly is a component of services already rendered;
1. That component is small. It is a portion of the "discretionary spending" budget. And regardless of the word used to describe it, it still wouln't be the same as a debt default. I'm sure you've paid a bill late before and not much happened. And I'm also sure you are aware that your "cable bill" example is not representative: most utility bills accrue and are paid month-to-month.

2. Ongoing spending items like jet fuel could be saved immediately by grounding government airplanes. Worker pay could be saved by furloughing workers. These items would have a near-immediate impact (within days or weeks) on government spending levels.

3. None of our "entitlement spending" fits that description.
 
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  • #53


SixNein said:
...
These parties can be anything from bond holders to granny waiting on her SSI check. If the government is unable to make payments to meet its obligations, it defaults. ...throwing a torch in the middle of a bond market and hopping it doesn't catch on fire.

An over broad use of the term. Businesses commonly fire or layoff people or close down a division. So does the government for that matter. These events are not commonly referred to as "defaults" on obligations.

You go a step further when connecting the reaction of bond markets to events like closing a national park or furloughing government staff. The use of the term in that context is not just odd but misleading. The bond market concerns itself with payment of interest on bonds and inflation, now and in the future, not national parks, Medicare, or furloughs for GS14s.
 
  • #54


turbo said:
Let's clarify: SS is paid for by payroll taxes ...
Not any more, not in full.

Social Security’s expenditures exceeded non-interest income [i.e. payroll taxes] in 2010 and 2011, the first such occurrences since 1983, and the Trustees estimate that these expenditures will remain greater than non-interest income throughout the 75-year projection period.
 
  • #55


Another good source for data is the IRS itself: http://www.irs.gov/uac/Tax-Stats-2
I'd definitely ignore anything from the news media unless they are well sourced. Lot's of misinformation out there.
 
  • #56
I agree with you on the Republican side.

For Obama, the situation is win-win. First, he doesn't have to care if his approval rating takes even a temporary hit because he doesn't have to run for re-election. Second, if he looks at both the recent media treatment and hindsight on Clinton, he knows that even if the Republicans succeed in decreasing government spending and the debt situation improves, he can still take credit for it!
 
  • #57
russ_watters said:
I'm surprised by the confusion this is causing. The difference is simply that some spending is legally obligated contracts to third parties and can't be unilaterally canceled by the government, while other spending can be unilaterally cancelled. If you can just change your mind and not spend (say you delay buying a car for a year), that's not a "default".

Quote from the other thread, which seems to have more debt ceiling discussion than the debt ceiling thread.

The key question is who can change their mind and not spend any more money.

If line item vetoes are unconstitutional, I assume it will be unconstitutional for Obama to unilaterally rewrite the budget so that we stay under the debt ceiling. The only choices for the executive branch are when to pay each bill, which to pay first, etc.

All of the spending that the Congress and President already made into law will take place unless Congress also rewrites the budget when they deny the rise in the debt ceiling (and if they were capable of agreeing on a budget, would be in this predicament?) If they simply fail to raise the debt ceiling, the current spending plan is still in place.

Shutting down a federal agency and furloughing all of the workers to save money would be a unilateral rewriting of the budget and unconstitutional. (Granted, workers may get tired of getting paid late and quit, but the executive branch can't furlough them.) Unilaterally deciding to reduce Social Security checks or cease paying unemployment benefits would be a unilateral rewriting of the budget and unconstitutional.

Every person will receive their Social Security check - eventually. Everone will receive their military pension checks - eventually. Every bond holder will be paid - eventually. Everyone will get their income tax refund check - eventually. The only control the executive branch has is over when those checks will go out - not if those checks will eventually go out.
 
  • #58
BobG said:
The key question is who can change their mind and not spend any more money.

If line item vetoes are unconstitutional, I assume it will be unconstitutional for Obama to unilaterally rewrite the budget so that we stay under the debt ceiling. The only choices for the executive branch are when to pay each bill, which to pay first, etc.

All of the spending that the Congress and President already made into law will take place unless Congress also rewrites the budget when they deny the rise in the debt ceiling (and if they were capable of agreeing on a budget, would be in this predicament?) If they simply fail to raise the debt ceiling, the current spending plan is still in place.
Obama has correctly pointed out that he's been put into a position where any or no action will violate federal law. If he stops spending, he'll violate laws that tell him to spend. If he ignores the debt ceiling, he'll violate that law. Trouble is: both (all) are laws he signed. So he's just as in it as Congress is.

Obama has shown a willingness in the past to ignore federal law (immigration, nuclear waste), so whatever he chooses, I don't think he'll be too troubled by that aspect of the decision.
 
  • #59


SixNein said:
Let me try a different approach... because my current explanation is getting absolutely nowhere.

The reason it is getting nowhere is because you are using terms outside of their accepted definition. As mhslep points out, your use of the word "default" is overly broad and does not reflect how the word is used in either private or public financing. (Russ has a good overview as well)

One option at this point is to just have eveyrone else in the thread redefine "default" for you, but this would create confusion whenever the word was referenced outside of the thread.

Instead, I'm just going to correct you every time you misuse it, so other readers are aware of the discrepancy.
 
  • #60
The term default is being abused far beyond this forum by prominent figures, so I suppose it should not be surprising to see it done here.

Scott Simon said:
.. it will certainly be no laughing matter if the U. S. Congress refuses to raise the borrowing limit and the U. S. government defaults on its debt. ..

Economist/NYT Columnist Paul Krugman said:
...Finally, just consider the vileness of that G.O.P. threat. If we were to hit the debt ceiling, the U.S. government would end up defaulting on many of its obligations. This would have disastrous effects on financial markets, the economy, and our standing in the world.

White House (Carney) said:
...There are only two options to deal with the debt limit: Congress can pay its bills or it can fail to act and put the nation into default. When Congressional Republicans played politics with this issue last time, putting us at the edge of default, it was a blow to our economic recovery,

Fortunately some experts are responding. From John Cochrane, finance and economics professor at Chicago (who cites those examples above):

Cochrane said:
But what's Paul Krugman doing with this obvious... I'm having a hard time finding a polite word...piece of misinformation? ... Parse that carefully for Clintonian veracity. "Defaulting on its obligations" could mean not paying promised farm price supports, or delaying payments (as the State of Illinois does) to vendors, not actual default on Federal debt. So it's just a nanometer this side of factually incorrect. But you'd have to be very knowledgeable not to infer from the following sentence "disastrous effect on financial markets" that Krugman is not talking about actual "default" (a term meaning "not paying back bonds") from this more metaphorical sort of "default" (meaning breaking an implicit promise). ...
I agreed on the consequences of default. But, as much as [Krugman] dislikes Republicans and the debt ceiling, passing on the canard that hitting the ceiling implies a default on Treasury debt is just a little... here we go a search for a polite word again...misleading,
 
  • #61


russ_watters said:
I'm surprised by the confusion this is causing. The difference is simply that some spending is legally obligated contracts to third parties and can't be unilaterally canceled by the government, while other spending can be unilaterally cancelled. If you can just change your mind and not spend (say you delay buying a car for a year), that's not a "default".

Expansion, with three broad categories:

1. Discretionary spending. By definition; at the government's discretion. It is passed annually in a budget and can be (and often is) changed mid-year...usually increases, but it can also be decreased. Simply with a few strokes of a pen.

2. "Mandatory" spending. This is for "entitlements". The word "mandatory" is a reference to the fact that this spending doesn't have to be approved annually, but rather is long-term programs that automatically do their thing unless changes are made. Unless changes are made. So the same legality applies to these as to discretionary spending: The government can change or cancel these programs whenever it wants.

The debt limit would not change any contracts or any law. In other words, the treasury is obligated to fund those things in 1 and 2; as a result, the treasury would default because it is unable to do so. Keep in mind, the treasury does NOT have the power to change any spending law or contract. It is instead obligated to fund the things congress says it has to fund.

Just because congress has the power to avoid default does not mean it will. If congress fails to raise the debt limit, we will default needlessly. The only other option is for congress to make major changes to its outflows. It would have to cut whatever the shortfall is by the due date.
 
  • #62


russ_watters said:
Sixnein,
While there certainly is a component of services already rendered;
1. That component is small. It is a portion of the "discretionary spending" budget. And regardless of the word used to describe it, it still wouln't be the same as a debt default. I'm sure you've paid a bill late before and not much happened. And I'm also sure you are aware that your "cable bill" example is not representative: most utility bills accrue and are paid month-to-month.

2. Ongoing spending items like jet fuel could be saved immediately by grounding government airplanes. Worker pay could be saved by furloughing workers. These items would have a near-immediate impact (within days or weeks) on government spending levels.

3. None of our "entitlement spending" fits that description.

But your missing the point that congress doesn't actually act to change anything, and it is the only one with the legal power to do so. The treasury is obligated to fund these things by law. It is a LEGAL OBLIGATION period. It's non-negotiable for the Treasury. The treasury does not have any power what so ever to make changes in the law to avoid default. Only congress has that power. Just because congress has the power to make the changes (like raising the debt limit) does not mean the US avoids default. Congress actually has to exercise its power to avoid it.

read:
The debt limit is the total amount of money that the United States government is authorized to borrow to meet its existing legal obligations, including Social Security and Medicare benefits, military salaries, interest on the national debt, tax refunds, and other payments. The debt limit does not authorize 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.

Failing to increase the debt limit would have catastrophic economic consequences. It would cause the government to default on its legal obligations – an unprecedented event in American history. That would precipitate another financial crisis and threaten the jobs and savings of everyday Americans – putting the United States right back in a deep economic hole, just as the country is recovering from the recent recession.

http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Pages/debtlimit.aspx

bold mine.
 
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  • #63
Bob and I had a brief discussion of that point that you may have missed. To sum up:

Treasury has two laws to deal with here, not one. The other law is of course the debt ceiling law. So the treasury is left to choose which to violate and how. Unless you really think Geitner is an idiot, you should be able to assume none of the decisions he might make would include a bond default.
 
  • #64
The dictionary may forgive us for our indiscretion, but I doubt the bond market will.
 
  • #65
mheslep said:
Fortunately some experts are responding. From John Cochrane, finance and economics professor at Chicago (who cites those examples above):

Why not just take it from the US Treasury (who has all the financial and legal experts needed to figure things out... and this problem requires both types):
http://www.treasury.gov/initiatives/Documents/Debt Limit Myth v Fact FINAL.pdf

The problem with your cite's opinion is he's totally ignores the law. For example, what hierarchy exists that states bond holders must be given priority over statutory obligations?

From the GAO
We have previously examined challenges associated with managing cash
and debt when delays in raising the debt limit occurred, focusing on
the period from 1995 through 2010. We reported in February 2011 that
delays in raising the debt limit create debt and cash management
challenges for Treasury, and these challenges have been exacerbated in
recent years by a large growth in debt.[Footnote 3] The amount of
borrowing capacity provided by taking the extraordinary actions
available to Treasury has grown in size but has not kept pace with the
growth in Treasury's borrowing needs. This means that once debt
approaches the debt limit, Treasury may not be able to manage the
amount of debt subject to the limit for as long a period of time as it
had in the past before the debt limit must be increased. Further,
failure to raise the debt limit in a timely manner could have serious
negative consequences for the Treasury market and increase borrowing
costs.

http://www.gao.gov/assets/600/592835.txt

From the same source:
Delays in raising the debt limit can create uncertainty in the
Treasury market and lead to higher Treasury borrowing costs. GAO
estimated that delays in raising the debt limit in 2011 led to an
increase in Treasury’s borrowing costs of about $1.3 billion in fiscal
year 2011. However, this does not account for the multiyear effects on
increased costs for Treasury securities that will remain outstanding
after fiscal year 2011.
 
  • #66
russ_watters said:
Bob and I had a brief discussion of that point that you may have missed. To sum up:

Treasury has two laws to deal with here, not one. The other law is of course the debt ceiling law. So the treasury is left to choose which to violate and how. Unless you really think Geitner is an idiot, you should be able to assume none of the decisions he might make would include a bond default.
Actually, the treasury is probably facing a long list of legal nightmares. The central government doesn't exactly have a priority of creditors like many of the states. For example, you might look in state law and find that bond holders must come before other creditors except for maybe schools. The treasury isn't going to have such legal cover. And once those checks stop, a lot of different parties are going to be suing. Who knows how that'll even turn out. The treasury probably has all the legal and financial experts it needs to figure out its position. And it says its going to default.

At any rate, we'll call all of this a not-a-default if that makes everyone happy. I would disagree because these are all legal contracts in effect when funds stop but why parse over words. But hopefully, people can see risk here and understand why this is a much different issue than a budget induced shutdown. Congress would be taking a pre-fed law back when it use to issue debt and enforce this law. It's a nightmare for the financial system any way you look at it.
 
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  • #67
The US Treasury has reported the numbers for the http://www.fms.treas.gov/mts/mts1212.pdf: three months Oct-Dec totaled a deficit of $292B, or on trend for another annual deficit over one trillion dollars ($1.17 trillion for the fiscal year ending next Sept). The interest on the debt alone for the 1st quarter FY13 was $133B.

It appeared the tax increase passed in January might improve the deficit picture a small amount, but then the Sandy disaster package of $60B was also passed in January and proposals to offset the spending elsewhere were defeated.
 
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