What’s
Next in the Debt Ceiling Debate?
Implications
for the short term & the long term.
Provided by Jared Daniel of Wealth Guardian Group
In January, will the federal government
be shuttered again? At first thought,
it seems inconceivable that Congress would want to go through another
protracted fight like the one that shut things down for 16 days in October. That
could occur, however, if a new budget panel doesn’t meet its deadline.
Once more, the clock is ticking. By December 13, a group of 30 senators and
representatives have to hammer out a bipartisan budget agreement. It must a)
reconcile the markedly different House and Senate FY 2014 budget plans passed
earlier in 2013, and b) map out a longer-term plan to shrink the federal
deficit. If a) doesn’t happen, then the country will be threatened with another
federal shutdown on January 15. If b) doesn’t happen, then another round of
sequester cuts from the 2011 Budget Control Act will be initiated as of that
same date.1,2,3,4
Does this seem like déjà vu? It does among many political and economic analysts,
who fear a repeat of the supercommittee debacle of 2011, when a bicameral,
bipartisan group of 12 Capitol Hill legislators just gave up trying to find a
way to shave $2 trillion from the deficits projected for the next decade.4
This new committee is bigger, and like the supercommittee, its leaders
are far apart politically. Sen. Patty Murray (D-WA) and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-WI)
are the budget chairs of their respective chambers of Congress. The key
difference lies in the modesty of its ambition. On October 18, Murray told
Bloomberg that the committee would aim for “a budget path for this Congress in
the next year or two, or further if we can” rather than a “grand bargain”
across the next 10 years.1,3
Will they manage that? Some observers aren’t sure. Murray co-chaired
the failed supercommittee of 2011, and while Ryan was quiet during the fall
budget fight, he recently authored an op-ed piece for the Wall Street Journal reiterating his controversial ideas to slash
the deficit by reforming entitlement programs. Still, Sen. Lindsey Graham
(R-SC) told Bloomberg that “there’s a real desire to take another effort, not
at a grand bargain, but at a sequestration replacement,” and Sen. Jeff Sessions
(R-AL) commented that “we don’t want to raise expectations above reality, but I
think there’s some things we could do.”1,3,5
Leaders from of both parties maintain there will be no shutdown in
January. Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) stated that a shutdown
is “off the table” this winter. On CNN’s State
of the Union, Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) warned that the public would not
tolerate “another repetition of this disaster”; on ABC’s This Week, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said she
sympathized with the public’s “disgust at what happened.” These comments do not
necessarily imply expedient negotiations ahead.3,6
The short-term fix didn’t fix everything. As a FY 2014 budget hasn’t yet been agreed upon, the
Treasury is still relying on stopgap funding to keep the federal government
running through January 15 and “extraordinary measures” to raise the federal
debt limit through February 7.2
The long-term outlook for America’s
credit rating didn’t really change. Fitch
put its outlook for the U.S. on “negative” and warned of a potential downgrade;
Dagong, the major Chinese credit ratings agency, actually downgraded the U.S.
from A to A-. Even so, S&P and Moody’s didn’t take action as a result of
October’s shutdown; while S&P thinks the shutdown will cut 0.6% off of Q4
GDP, it still gives the U.S. an AA+ rating (downgraded from AAA in 2011).7,8
America lacks top-notch credit ratings, but few nations have them. In
fact, only 11 countries possess the coveted AAA rating from S&P and Fitch
plus the leading Aaa rating from Moody’s. If you look at S&P’s ratings for
the globe’s ten largest economies, Germany is the only one with an AAA. China gets
an AA- with a “stable” outlook and Japan has an AA- with a “negative” outlook. While
Russia has the world’s eighth biggest economy, Moody’s, Fitch and S&P all
rate it one grade above junk bond status.7
Is Wall Street all that worried about
another shutdown? At the moment, no –
because there are several reasons why the next debt debate could be less painful.
As the goal appears to be a near-term bargain instead of a grand one, it may be
more easily realized. If the newly appointed budget panel fails, the economy can
probably weather $20 billion of 2014 sequester cuts. Also, many mid-term
elections are scheduled for 2014; do congressional incumbents really want to
damage their reputations further with another shameful stalemate?8
While confidence on Wall Street and Main Street would erode with a
repeat shutdown, the Treasury might face a slightly easier challenge in January
than it did in October. Sequester cuts would trim the already-shrinking federal
deficit further in early 2014, conserving some federal money. As a Goldman
Sachs research note just cited, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac could also make their
dividend payments to the Treasury early in Q1, which would also help.8
Global investors can’t really back away
from America. The dollar is still the
world’s reserve currency, and China owns about $1.3 trillion of our Treasuries.
Those two facts alone should compel our legislators to work things out this
winter, hopefully before the last minute.7
This material was prepared by MarketingLibrary.Net Inc., and does
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Citations.
1 - cnn.com/2013/10/17/politics/budget-talks-whats-next
[10/17/13]
2 - csmonitor.com/USA/DC-Decoder/2013/1017/A-new-shutdown-clock-is-ticking.-Can-Washington-avoid-a-rerun-video
[10/17/13]
3 - bloomberg.com/news/2013-10-18/obama-s-goal-of-grand-budget-deal-elusive-as-talks-begin.html
[10/18/13]
4 - tinyurl.com/lchxblz [10/18/13]
5 - cnn.com/2013/10/09/politics/shutdown-ryan/
[10/9/13]
6 - tinyurl.com/lbp8cxn [10/20/13]
7 - globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/united-states/131018/credit-rating-debt-explained
[10/20/13]
8 - cbsnews.com/8301-505123_162-57608220/5-reasons-wall-street-thinks-the-next-fiscal-feud-will-fizzle/
[10/19/13]
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