Debt showdown back on the table

In summer 2011, when a debt crisis like the current one loomed, President Barack Obama warned Republicans that older Americans might not get their Social Security checks unless there was a deal to raise the nation’s borrowing limit.

After weeks of brinkmanship, Republicans consented and Obama agreed to a deficit-reduction plan the GOP wanted. Crisis averted, for a time.

Now that there’s a fresh showdown, the possibility of Social Security cuts — and more — is back on the table.

The government could run out of cash to pay all its bills in full as early as Feb. 15, according to one authoritative estimate, and congressional Republicans want significant spending cuts in exchange for raising the borrowing limit. Obama, forced to negotiate an increase in 2011, has pledged not to negotiate again.

Without an agreement, every option facing his administration would be unprecedented.

It would require a degree of financial creativity that could test the law, perhaps even the Constitution.

It could shortchange Social Security recipients and other people, including veterans and the poor, who rely on government programs.

It could force the Treasury to contemplate selling government assets, a step considered but rejected in 2011. In short, the Treasury would have to create its own form of triage, creating a priority list of its most crucial obligations, from interest payments to debtors to benefits to vulnerable Americans.

“It may be that somewhere down the line someone will challenge what the administration did in that moment, but in the moment, who’s going to stop them?” asked Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former director of the Congressional Budget Office. “I pray we never have to find out how imaginative they are.”

In such a debt crisis, the president would have to decide what laws he wants to break. Does he breach the borrowing limit without a congressional OK? Does he ignore spending commitments required by law?

In a letter to Obama on Friday, Senate Democratic leaders urged him to consider taking any “lawful steps that ensure that America does not break its promises and trigger a global economic crisis — without congressional approval, if necessary.”

The White House has resisted that path. It has rejected recommendations that it invoke a provision in the 14th Amendment to the Constitution that states that “the validity of the public debt of the United States ... shall not be questioned.”

“There are only two options to deal with the debt limit: Congress can pay its bills or they can fail to act and put the nation into default,” White House press secretary Jay Carney said. “Congress needs to do its job.”

So what’s left if Congress does not act in time?

Technically, the government hit the debt ceiling at the end of December. Since then, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner has halted full payments into the retirement and disability fund for government workers and to the health benefits fund of Postal Service retirees.

The Treasury can stop payments to a special fund that purchases or sells foreign currencies to stabilize world financial markets.

Past administrations have taken such steps to buy time awaiting a debt ceiling increase. That happened under Presidents Bill Clinton and President George W. Bush. The government restored those funds after Congress raised the debt ceiling.

Those measures and others could keep the government solvent, perhaps as far as early March, according to an analysis by the Bipartisan Policy Center.

There are other extreme possibilities as well.

The federal government could sell some of its assets, from its gold stockpile to its student loan portfolio.

“All these things are in principle marketable, and in a crisis you’d get huge discounts on them,” said Holtz-Eakin, now head of the American Action Forum, a conservative policy institute. “They wouldn’t be good ordinary business, but you would be in extraordinary times.”

According to a treasury inspector general report last year, department officials in 2011 considered and rejected the idea, concluding that gold sales would destabilize the international financial system, that selling off the student loan portfolio was not feasible and that such “fire sales” would buy only limited time.

An idea pushed by some liberals would take advantage of a legal loophole meant for coin collectors and have the Treasury mint platinum coins that could be deposited at the Federal Reserve and used to pay the nation’s bills.

But the Treasury issued a statement Saturday putting the idea to rest, saying neither the department nor the Federal Reserve believes the law “can or should be used to facilitate the production of platinum coins for the purpose of avoiding an increase in the debt.”

limit.”

Once all efforts are exhausted, then the government would be in uncharted territory.

At that point, the government would continue to get tax revenue, but hardly enough to keep up with the bills. According to the Bipartisan Policy Center, the federal government between Feb. 15 and March 15 will get $277 billion in revenue and face $452 billion in obligations.

The Treasury would have to decide whether to pay some obligations and not others or to simply pay for one day’s bills as it tax revenue rolls in, exponentially delaying payments the longer the debt ceiling is not raised. Under virtually every scenario contemplated, payment of interest on the debt takes precedence to put off a calamitous default.

“I happen to think the triage would be chosen to create the maximum amount of political pressure to break the impasse right away, which would be withholding Social Security checks,” said Philip Wallach, a fellow at the Brookings Institution.


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Comments (13)


1) Comment by ScotB - 15/01/2013

For the record, Senator Obama voted against raising the debt ceiling.

2) Comment by ScotB - 15/01/2013

"The fact that we're here today to debate raising America's debt limit is a sign of leadership failure. Leadership means 'The buck stops here.' Instead, Washington is shifting the burden of bad choices today onto the backs of our children and grandchildren. America has a debt problem and a failure of leadership. Americans deserve better. I therefore intend to oppose the effort to increase America's debt limit." - quote from Barack Obama. I agree with him completely!

3) Comment by ScotB - 15/01/2013

The President cites the law and being responsible. This is the same guy who hasn't passed a budget in four years! The law requires Congress and the administration to pass a budget. It is the law. What lending officer would loan more money to any enterprise that hadn't even prepared a budget in four years?!!! No more credit until Congress passes a budget, Mr. President! If the House passes an increase in our debt limit without passing a budget first, they all deserve to be removed from office! Good grief!!!

4) Comment by phil - 14/01/2013

When grandma and grandpa cannot cash their social security checks it will be because Obama and Congress led this nation to going broke. If I remember correctly the Soviet Union had a similar situation before they collapsed. I hate to think we are not smart enough and will follow that same path for similar but somewhat different reasons. People who say there is no relationship between the national budget, the national debt etc need to go back and take economics 101 again. Simple math - when you spend more than you make, there will eventually be a day of reckoning. I fear we are getting close to that day.

5) Comment by agagent - 14/01/2013

Obama just finished signing the fiscal cliff deal which added $3.9 trillion to the national debt over 10 years. That crisis was about too much spending, tax increases, and automatic budget cuts. The Obama solution was to increase spending and increase taxes. We have another crisis and Obama's solution is to ignore the irresponsible spending and raise the debt ceiling so that he can continue to add to the mounting national debt.

6) Comment by agagent - 14/01/2013

Keeping the country in a constant state of crisis was how Hitler got what he wanted in Germany before World War II. Obama uses a similar political tactic in dealing with his opposition. “Never let a crisis go to waste” was how Obama’s Chief of Staff described the tactic.

7) Comment by agagent - 14/01/2013

Obama has proven that he cannot be trusted with the country’s credit card. The Democrats in the Senate have a “spend as you please” fiscal plan. They have not passed a budget in years. Obama and the Democrats are more interested in growing government than in cutting spending or balancing the budget.

8) Comment by Whatnow - 14/01/2013

I'm with you foldgers! The Sandy relief fund showed exactly what is wrong. Pork, pork and more pork for things that can be put off until we are solvent. All that ammo that the government purchased last year is ridiculous and unwarranted. It's buying things like that which keeps us broke. The lavish parties and perks have got to stop. Politicians are all do as we say, not what we do. I haven't seen one bit of cutting spending for them and they expect us to tighten our belts and pay for their extravagances. Quit building other countries and take care of our own. Paying countries to like us has never worked. They will still slit our throats the next day!

9) Comment by foldgers - 14/01/2013

Why is it in times like this, the elderly will suffer with cuts in SS, or the poor will suffer with less medical care? It is like these are the ONLY two things the US government can cut? Really? Please, stop using this fear inducing way of getting people to hate other people. CUT stupid programs, I am sure there are hundreds of billions wasted DAILY. The world is not our baby, we are suffering right now...cut ALL foreign aide in HALF for a year or two. If those countries get mad at us, cut them off! It is not our responsibility to help every NOT capitalist country out there! They are lucky we help them at all. If our elderly and poor are suffering here, why should non US elderly and poor be put ahead of our own? Plus, I am certain there are thousands of ways to cut spending. Give me 1 week looking at EVERY program we pay for, I guarantee you I could make a huge dent in spending and still have all the necessary programs fully funded.

10) Comment by Lannonmac - 14/01/2013

The House Republicans are exploring new areas of irresponsibility with their refusal to vote to increase the U.S. debt limit! For those of you that don’t know, the U.S. debt limit has nothing to do with new spending and picking a fight over this will have ZERO effect over any new deficit spending. The U.S. debt limit concerns only spending already authorized by Congress, nothing more, so in effect the House Republicans are refusing to pay the bills that THEY already authorized! What the House Republicans are proposing is to paint the U.S. government into a position where we either default on US bonds (most of which are owned by U.S. citizens, U.S. retirement funds and U.S. mutual funds) or be unable to pay U.S. active duty military personnel, federal employees, Social Security recipients, contractors with federal contracts and Medicare recipients. If the House Republicans carry out their threat the U.S. economy will suffer dramatically and EVERY AMERICAN CITIZEN will feel the effects of their stupidity in the loss of investment values and increased unemployment. The elderly and health providers will be especially hard hit because of delays in Social Security checks and Medicare payments. So when your Grandmother and Grandfather can’t pay for their groceries or medication in March, you can thank the Republican Party.

11) Comment by phil - 14/01/2013

We should be decreasing the national debt and not raising the debt limit. We will get to the place that we cannot even pay off the interest on the debt if this keeps going on. We have recently been having this same issue every year and the national debt just keeps getting bigger and bigger. I think it is time for the entire Congress to stop talking and start doing. Someone up there needs to figure out what a budget really is.

12) Comment by tradewinns - 14/01/2013

an easy solution to a temporary crisis is to stop paying for free cell phones and other such stupid programs. while the cell phones program may not handle the situation by itself, it is at least a start and noone will lose food or medical treatment in the short run. to talk about stopping SS payments is ludicrous and used to induce fear to those who rely on SS to live (that includes me). politicians are bottom feeders, right there with lawyers. the people should take away all honarary titles just to show them we are the boss. especially such nosense as "the honorable" when none of them live up to the title.

13) Comment by agagent - 14/01/2013

Thanks to our record-breaking President, Obama: most spending in a year, four highest annual deficits, and added a record $5.8 trillion to the national debt in 4 years. Of course it was Bush and the TEA Party’s fault.