Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Debt limit action needed by mid-august, analysts warn

- Tribune News Service CQ- Roll Call

Economists at Moody’s Analytics estimate that the Treasury Department will run out of borrowing room by mid-august if Congress doesn’t act to raise or suspend the statutory debt limit by then.

The “x date” after which the Treasury may not be able to pay all of the federal government’s bills appears to be Aug. 18, specifical­ly, according to Moody’s economists Mark Zandi, Christian deritis and Bernard Yaros.

The trio laid out various scenarios and potential consequenc­es of failure to lift the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling in a new paper this week, on a topic that will be examined more closely Tuesday afternoon in a Senate Banking subcommitt­ee hearing led by Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-mass. Zandi is among those slated to testify.

The Moody’s paper lays out potentiall­y fearsome scenarios, particular­ly if there is a lengthy stalemate. If there is a “prolonged breach,” the analysts wrote, “the blow to the economy would be cataclysmi­c.”

Their comments echo those from Federal

Reserve Chairman

Jerome Powell at a Senate Banking hearing earlier in the day. While “hard to estimate,” Powell said, the consequenc­es of failure to act on the debt limit “could be extraordin­arily adverse and could do longstandi­ng harm.”

Moody’s economists note expectatio­ns remain that policymake­rs likely won’t allow the situation to get to that point, given Congress has always acted in time in the past. However, they wrote that the current debt limit debate “looks to be even more vexed” this time and that the odds of a debt limit breach are “meaningful­ly greater than zero.”

The paper notes the difficulty with which

Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif., managed to get elected speaker, along with the concession­s he made to conservati­ves — including steep spending cuts Democrats have already rejected.

Such circumstan­ces, the Moody’s authors wrote,

“do not augur well for a reasonably graceful resolution to the current impasse.”

Another concern, according to Zandi and his coauthors, is that financial markets do not appear to have priced in a debt limit stalemate.

With stock and bond prices not yet factoring in a possible marketratt­ling failure to pay U.S. obligation­s, “policymake­rs may believe they have nothing to worry about and fail to resolve the debt limit in time,” Moody’s authors wrote. “This would be an egregious error.”

Moody’s said its estimated Aug. 18 date is a few days after the Treasury would have made a scheduled interest payment to bondholder­s.

“Investors in shortterm Treasury securities are coalescing around a similar X-date, demanding higher yields on securities that mature just after the date given worries that a debt limit breach may occur,” according to the analysis.

Congress is scheduled to be in its summer recess the month of August, and the Moody’s timeline puts added pressure on lawmakers to resolve the situation before they leave Washington this summer.

Other analysts estimate the temporary measures could be exhausted as early as July, with an outside chance of exhaustion in June.

Moody’s analysts lay out five scenarios for how the drama could end, ranging from a “clean” debt limit boost with no conditions to a prolonged breach in which the Treasury can’t make required payments to bondholder­s, Social Security recipients, government contractor­s and more. The options are listed in order of least to most harmful to the U.S. economy:

Clean debt limit increase

Moody’s economists wrote that “history is a good guide” and portends a last-minute deal to raise or suspend the debt limit temporaril­y, with no spending cuts or other financial conditions attached.

“This scenario is consistent with the long, arduous history of agreements on the debt limit, and it is fitting given the bipartisan nature of the financial obligation­s the debt would cover,” they wrote.

Under this scenario, lawmakers would pass a short-term debt limit suspension through

Sept. 30, lining up the new deadline with when lawmakers need to act on fiscal 2024 appropriat­ions or face a partial government shutdown. Congress would then go on in October to raise the debt ceiling enough to “push the next debt limit battle into early 2025,” after the presidenti­al election.

“Getting the debt limit legislatio­n across the finish line will surely be messy and painful at times, causing heightened volatility in financial markets. But in this scenario, lawmakers ultimately get the job done before there is economic damage,” Zandi and colleagues wrote. ‘Constituti­onal crisis’ In this scenario, Congress fails to act in time and the Biden administra­tion resorts to one of various untested workaround­s.

One option is to invoke the 14th Amendment to the Constituti­on, which states that the “validity of the public debt … shall not be questioned,” to keep paying the bills. Moody’s acknowledg­es this option may be “a tenuous constituti­onal interpreta­tion for the president to use,” but that it “seems the most viable option” as a last resort.

Moody’s is less enthusiast­ic about other possibilit­ies. One would have the Treasury mint a trillion-dollar platinum coin, deposit it at the Federal Reserve and use those funds to pay the bills temporaril­y. Moody’s said use of this authority would amount to “circumvent­ing Congress’ power of the purse” while also putting the Federal Reserve in the middle of the fight.

Another option for the Treasury is to issue “premium bonds,” or sell debt for more than face value. The Treasury would collect extra cash, but investors would be promised higher interest rates. Moody’s called this option a “budget gimmick” that would be costly and cause interest rates “to spike as investors view this chicanery as putting the nation’s fiscal discipline at risk.”

Payment prioritiza­tion

Under this “more worrisome” scenario, according to Moody’s, the Treasury is forced to prioritize who gets paid first out of remaining cash balances after borrowing authority is exhausted.

The Treasury would “almost certainly” try to pay bondholder­s first, but it’s unclear whether it has legal authority to do so, and bond investors would still demand higher interest rates to compensate for the added risk.

“Moreover, politicall­y it seems a stretch to think that bond investors, who include many foreign investors, would get their money ahead of American seniors, the military, or even the federal government’s electric bill,” Moody’s economists wrote. More likely, the Treasury would delay all payments until it had enough cash on hand to pay them all.

“Financial markets would be roiled. A TARP moment seems likely,” Zandi and colleagues wrote, recalling when, in 2008, the House rejected the initial bill to establish the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program. After that, lawmakers would quickly reverse course and back a debt limit boost, Moody’s wrote.

House Republican plan

While there is no specific GOP plan on the table, Moody’s models what could happen if Republican­s successful­ly push through policies to balance the federal budget within a decade without any tax increases. The Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget peg the cuts required at as much as $16 trillion.

Moody’s analysts assume, for the sake of argument, that Republican­s take Social Security and Medicare cuts off the table, as well as defense spending, and instead eliminate all nondefense discretion­ary spending as well as the entire Medicaid program.

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