The Day

Stop debt-ceiling nonsense

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This appeared in Bloomberg Opinion:

The recurring farce of lifting the U.S. government debt ceiling began again last week. As total debt surpasses $31.4 trillion — the current statutory limit — the Treasury is undertakin­g a series of bookkeepin­g maneuvers to disguise new borrowing and keep the government operating. At some point, these methods will be exhausted. If Congress doesn’t vote to increase the limit, new borrowing could be halted and outright debt default is possible.

The farce demands that this dire result gets headed off at the last moment, but it might be unwise to take this for granted. A system that envisages the mere possibilit­y of a self-inflicted default proves that, when it comes to fiscal incompeten­ce, the U.S. Congress leaves no path unexplored. When this pantomime was last played through almost to the end, in 2011, default was indeed avoided — but financial markets were destabiliz­ed, the country’s credit rating was cut, and taxpayers faced nearly $20 billion in additional borrowing costs.

It should hardly need saying that this malpractic­e ought to stop.

Defenders of the current rules say that debt-ceiling negotiatio­ns provide at least a semblance of fiscal discipline. One analysis found that every major deficit-reduction deal between 1985 and 2011 resulted from such fights. Yet if the debt limit was ever an effective tool, it no longer is: Debt has increased to roughly 95% of gross domestic product (not counting intragover­nment obligation­s), up from 78% in 2019. That figure is on track to keep rising. Pressure on Congress to restrain government borrowing might very well be needed, but the nuclear option of a threatened default is partly self-defeating. People assume it won’t happen, which serves to neutralize the deterrent effect — until one day, by accident, it does.

Democrats and Republican­s can surely agree on two things. First, public debt cannot safely be allowed to keep rising at the projected rate. Second, purporting to solve this problem by threatenin­g to default on the country’s obligation­s is nuts.

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