After the past several crises, some real and some manufactured, we are now on our way to the next one: the debt ceiling. To pay for the spending Congress has authorized, the Treasury needs to borrow more money. But it can’t borrow more money because Congress has said there is a ceiling to how much it can borrow, and the Treasury has hit that ceiling. So, Congress has essentially forbidden the Treasury to borrow enough money to pay for the things that Congress has said the Treasury has to pay for. If this makes no sense to you, well, I agree. But this is where we are, again. We have seen this movie several times before.
The Treasury hit the debt ceiling several months ago and since then has been using “the usual emergency measures” to pay the bills. Those emergency measures will run out sometime next month, however. At that point, the Treasury will not be able to pay all the bills. Decisions will have to be made over what bills to pay. Social security? National defense? Bond interest payments? Even more important, decisions will have to be made over what bills not to pay.
Understanding The Crisis
U.S. Treasury debt is universally considered a risk-free asset. But if the government doesn’t pay its obligations—if it defaults—then that risk-free status comes into question. As the foundation of the global financial system, any default could shake that whole structure, rattling markets. On a more extended time frame, as the U.S. credit score goes down, the interest rates we pay could go up. So, this is a bad thing. While this is definitely a manufactured crisis, it is also potentially a real one.
The thing is, however, that it is not at its core an economic crisis. The U.S. can borrow enough money to pay its bills, and that has never been in question. Instead, it is a political issue. It’s not can we pay the bills, but will we. So far, the answer has been yes, eventually. There are almost always political fireworks around the debt ceiling, like this time, and sometimes they actually have extended into a government shutdown. And that is what is very likely to happen this time as well.
From a political standpoint, this is and remains a big deal. The overwhelming likelihood is that we will get a deal before the Treasury runs out of money, but that outcome is not certain. So for political drama, watch this space. We could see another governmental shutdown to conserve money, and we could see dramatic headlines about which bills get paid and which don’t. Expect lots of headlines and lots of public drama.
The Economic And Market Impact
Even if we don’t get a deal and do get those headlines, though, from an economic and market standpoint, the impact would likely be limited. There are tools and workarounds to minimize the damage until the politicians reach an agreement. Yes, there would be a pause in payments, but government bills will be paid, eventually, just as they have been in past debt ceiling confrontations.
Since the bills will be paid, the only real economic impact will be in the delay, and that will be small. We have seen this already, as the direct effect of past confrontations and even shutdowns has been negligible over time. The U.S. economy, thank goodness, is much larger than and largely independent of the government.
From a market perspective, we might see more impact, especially in the short term. Volatility is likely. But as with the economy, once a deal is finally reached, that damage will pass fairly quickly. Again, this is what has happened in past confrontations, with short-term volatility fading once a deal has been reached.