Kuwait Times

Trump has plan if debt limit not up by August

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The Trump administra­tion has a backup plan to keep the government from defaulting on its financial obligation­s even if Congress misses an August deadline to raise the debt limit, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told a congressio­nal panel Monday.

Mnuchin had previously set an August deadline for the federal government to avoid a catastroph­ic default. Mnuchin said he still prefers that Congress increase the government’s authority to borrow before lawmakers leave on a five-week break in August. However, he said he is “comfortabl­e” that the Treasury Department can meet the government’s financial obligation­s through the start of September. Private analysts say Mnuchin probably has even greater leeway.

Slowdown in revenues

“If for whatever reason Congress does not act before August we do have back up plans that we can fund the government,” Mnuchin said without elaboratin­g. “So I want to make it clear that that is not the timeframe that would create a serious problem.” The federal government technicall­y hit the debt limit in March, but Treasury has been using accounting steps known as “extraordin­ary measures” to avoid a default.

Shortly before Mnuchin testified, a Washington think tank projected that despite the slowdown in revenues, the government will have enough cash to pay its bills until October or November. The Bipartisan Policy Center says that revenue results from this month’s quarterly tax payments could clarify the deadline, but for now it forecasts that Mnuchin has sufficient maneuverin­g room to keep the government solvent into the fall. The policy center says a big Oct. 2 payment into the military retirement trust fund could trigger default.

As of Friday, the Treasury had a cash balance of $148 billion, down from $204 billion a month ago. The national debt is nearly $20 trillion, including money owed to several federal programs. Raising the debt limit has become a politicall­y-charged vote in Congress, even though economists believe that an unpreceden­ted default would catastroph­ic for the economy. Republican­s, who control Congress and the White House, are struggling to come up with a strategy to raise the debt limit, with some GOP members demanding spending cuts in exchange for their vote.

But since Republican­s have many members who simply refuse to vote for a debt increase, GOP leaders such as Speaker Paul Ryan of Wisconsin may have no choice but to seek help from Democrats, who are demanding that any debt limit hike be “clean” of GOP add-ons. Lawmakers are trying to deal with the debt limit while at the same time a House panel is beginning work on spending bills to fund the government.

Also Monday, Republican­s controllin­g the House took the first steps to approve President Donald Trump’s big budget increase for veterans’ health care and the Pentagon. A House Appropriat­ions panel got the process under way with voice vote approval of an $89 billion spending bill for the Department of Veterans Affairs and Pentagon constructi­on projects. The bill would give the VA a 5 percent budget hike for the budget year beginning in October as the agency works to improve wait times and correct other problems.

Reviving parochial projects

The Defense Department, meanwhile, would receive a $2 billion, 10 percent increase for military constructi­on projects at bases in both the US and abroad. The measure also funds $439 million worth of projects such as barracks and target ranges not requested by the administra­tion, which could open Republican­s up to charges they are reviving parochial projects known as earmarks. —AP

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