Los Angeles Times

Biden should let the game of debt ceiling chicken play out

The United States has reached its statutory debt limit; will the GOP raise it?

- By Jeffrey Frankel Jeffrey Frankel is a professor of capital formation and growth at Harvard University and a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research.

The United States has reached its statutory debt limit of $31.4 trillion. As Washington gears up for yet another partisan showdown over whether to raise the debt ceiling, with congressio­nal Republican­s seeking concession­s from Democrats in exchange for their votes, many are understand­ably nonchalant about it. Americans feel they have seen this movie before, and the story usually ends with the bickering politician­s reaching a last-minute compromise. So, no need to ring the alarm bells.

But this reboot could have a different, tragic ending. With the U.S. economy barreling toward the cliff ’s edge, it is clear that intransige­nt Republican­s have no intention of hitting the brakes. This could mean a once-unthinkabl­e U.S. government default.

Unfortunat­ely, letting Republican­s drive the U.S. economy off a cliff may be President Biden’s best option right now. The U.S. still has at least five months to jump out of the car. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said last week that she will pursue a set of “extraordin­ary measures” (all of which have become rather ordinary in recent decades) to postpone America’s day of reckoning until early June.

Raising the U.S. debt ceiling does not mean that the government has decided to increase spending. It means only that the government will honor the debt it assumed along with spending and tax decisions that Congress has already made. If Congress wants to reduce the budget deficit — a worthy aim — it should cut spending, raise taxes or both.

How should the Biden administra­tion respond in the likely event that Republican­s refuse to back down? Several untested (and imperfect) creative solutions that have been proposed during previous debt-ceiling standoffs could enable policymake­rs to stave off the threat of an imminent Treasury default.

First, Biden could invoke the 14th Amendment and single-handedly raise the debt limit — as former President Clinton suggested during the debt-ceiling standoff of 2011. Adopted in the immediate aftermath of the Civil War and ratified in 1868, the amendment states that the “validity of the public debt of the United States … shall not be questioned.”

The argument for invoking the 14th Amendment is that the debt limit and the spending and tax bills included in the budget clearly contradict each other. Therefore, when forced to choose between these conflictin­g laws, the executive branch should opt to fulfill the U.S. government’s financial obligation­s and let the courts decide the legality at a later date. The counterarg­ument is that Republican­s would accuse Biden of flouting the law in an effort to increase federal spending, the confrontat­ion would trigger a constituti­onal crisis, and it is unclear how the conservati­vedominate­d Supreme Court would rule.

The Treasury will probably have enough tax revenue to meet at least 80% of already-legislated outlays without borrowing. But which 80% would it cover? Some suggest that prioritizi­ng interest payments to bondholder­s over other expenses would prevent a default and a rating downgrade, thereby avoiding higher interest rates on future debt.

But even if bondholder­s continue to be paid, failing to pay other bills on time (for example, to federal contractor­s and salaried government workers) could be viewed as the U.S. government dodging its legal obligation­s. Moreover, to keep paying creditors, the government would have to cut big-ticket budget items such as payments to Social Security recipients, Medicare providers and active soldiers. Biden’s political opponents could then use that to stir up populist outrage.

Even if the Treasury could prioritize certain payments — such as interest payments, mandatory spending (for instance, Social Security, Medicare and veterans’ benefits) and military spending (soldiers’ salaries) — those three categories account for at least 85% of federal spending. There would not be enough incoming revenue to pay for all of them. Hypothetic­ally, even if die-hard fiscal hawks managed to eliminate all non-military discretion­ary spending, the gap between spending and revenue could not be closed without cutting one of the three protected categories.

Do the consequenc­es of a government default outweigh the drawbacks of these gimmick solutions? Ten or 20 years ago, the answer might have been yes. After the 2011 debt standoff provoked S&P to downgrade the U.S. credit rating for the first time, some argued that a default would be so disastrous that avoiding it was worth trying a creative gimmick.

But the world has changed since then. Even if technicall­y workable, these creative solutions would obscure who is to blame. Worse, they would not prevent global markets from doubting the reliabilit­y of the U.S. government’s commitment to meeting its financial obligation­s.

Ultimately, Republican­s would have to back down. Because the GOP’s rebels have become even more intransige­nt over the last decade, the standoff will probably go down to the wire, and the government may be forced to shirk some obligation­s for a few days, or even weeks.

By then, perhaps crashing securities markets, outraged beneficiar­ies and shifting voter attitudes would finally persuade enough holdouts to raise the debt ceiling. In the meantime, we have no choice but to let this game of chicken play out.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? TREASURY SECRETARY Janet Yellen
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times TREASURY SECRETARY Janet Yellen

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