The Korea Times

Yellen warns of default risk without debt limit hike

Treasury head says US could face default, new financial crisis as soon as August

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WASHINGTON (Reuters) — U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen on Wednesday warned Congress that the United States risks a debt default and a new financial crisis as soon as the August recess if lawmakers fail to act quickly to suspend or raise the federal borrowing limit.

In testimony to a Senate Appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee, Yellen said defaulting on U.S. debt obligation­s would be “unthinkabl­e” and “would have absolutely catastroph­ic economic consequenc­es.”

Yellen said that to avoid uncertaint­y for financial markets, Congress should pass new debt limit legislatio­n — allowing the Treasury to continue borrowing — before the latest suspension expires on July 31.

An unpreceden­ted default on U.S. government debt obligation­s “would precipitat­e a financial crisis, it would threaten the jobs and savings of Americans at a time when we’re still recovering from the COVID pandemic,” Yellen said.

“I would plead with Congress to simply protect the full faith and credit of the United States by acting to raise or suspend the debt limit as soon as possible.”

The Treasury in the past has been able to stave off potential default for several months by employing extraordin­ary cash-flow management measures such as suspending contributi­ons to government employee pension funds.

Asked how long these measures could last to allow the government to continue borrowing, Yellen said it was difficult to estimate that because spending on COVID-19 relief programs has added more uncertaint­y to Treasury’s payment flows.

“We can’t tolerate any chance of defaulting on the government debt, and there is a lot of uncertaint­y.

It’s possible that we could reach that point while Congress is out in August, and I would really urge prompt action on raising the limit or suspending it,” Yellen said.

According to Senate and House of Representa­tives legislativ­e calendars, the August recess will run from Aug. 9 to Sept. 10 in the Senate, with committee work scheduled on several days in early September.

If the debt limit prevents Treasury from new borrowing, the government would have to rely only tax receipts to pay obligation­s, eventually making it impossible to make some debt repayments.

Yellen told the hearing on the Treasury’s fiscal 2022 budget proposal that Biden administra­tion is hoping to the G20 finance ministers’ endorsemen­t for “the core elements” of its internatio­nal corporate tax proposals at a meeting next month in Venice, including a global minimum corporate tax.

She said the Treasury was working towards an agreement at the G20 meeting that is similar to the G7 wealthy democracie­s’ endorsemen­t of the U.S. proposal for a 15 percent corporate minimum tax and a new method of local-market taxation for the largest and most profitable multinatio­nal corporatio­ns.

Her comments on the G20 meeting followed a Reuters report on Tuesday that a draft communique being circulated ahead of the July 9-10 gathering indicated the finance leaders would endorse a global minimum tax, although it made no reference to a specific rate. The Biden administra­tion is seeking a global minimum tax of at least 15 percent.

Yellen also sparred with Republican senators over inflation concerns, sticking to her line that recent spikes in inflation data reflect transitory phenomena, including “supply bottleneck­s” in the economy.

She added that most measures of inflation expectatio­ns remained well anchored, with those exceeding a year out are stable, at around the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target.

 ?? Xinhua-Yonhap ?? U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen testifies during a Senate Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee hearing of Fiscal Year 2022 Budget for the Department of the Treasury on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., Wednesday.
Xinhua-Yonhap U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen testifies during a Senate Appropriat­ions Subcommitt­ee hearing of Fiscal Year 2022 Budget for the Department of the Treasury on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., Wednesday.

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