The Asian Age

Congress strikes deal to avert US debt default

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Washington, Dec. 8: US senators struck a deal Tuesday to create a onetime law allowing Democrats to lift the nation’s borrowing authority and avert a catastroph­ic credit default without requiring votes from the opposition Republican­s.

The House of Representa­tives approved the fix in an evening vote and it is expected to be approved by the Senate in the coming days — allowing lawmakers to avert the crisis with a simple 51-vote majority in the upper chamber. The Bipartisan Policy Center said last week it expected the United States would no longer be able to meet its debt repayment obligation­s between December 21 and January 28. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen has put the deadline even earlier — next Wednesday.

“Nobody wants to see the US default on its debts. As Secretary Yellen has warned, a default could eviscerate everything we've done to recover from the Covid crisis,” Democratic Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said on the floor of the chamber.

“We don’t want to see that, I don’t believe we will see that, and I continue to thank all my colleagues for cooperatin­g in good faith to preserve the full faith and credit of the United States.”

America spends more money than it collects through taxation so it borrows money via the issuing of government bonds, seen as among the world’s most reliable investment­s. Around 80 years ago lawmakers introduced a limit on how much federal debt could be accrued.

The ceiling has been lifted dozens of times to allow the government to meet its spending commitment­s — usually without drama and with the support of both parties — and stands at around $29 trillion. Democratic leaders have spent weeks underlinin­g the havoc that a default would have wrought, including the loss of an estimated six million jobs and $15 trillion in household wealth, as well as increased costs for mortgages and other borrowing. But Republican­s in both chambers of Congress were initially objecting to helping raise the limit this time around, saying they refused to support President Joe Biden’s “reckless” taxing and spending plans. —

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