Tentative deal in US debt ceiling negotiations

2023-05-28 02:25:47

President Joe Biden and Republican Kevin McCarthy have apparently achieved a breakthrough in the US debt dispute and are expected to avert a default in the world’s largest economy. Biden and the Republican chairman of the House of Representatives reached a preliminary agreement on Saturday (local time), McCarthy said in Washington. The project still has to be approved by Congress.

“After weeks of negotiations, we have reached an agreement in principle. We still have a lot of work to do. But I believe that this is an agreement in principle that is worthy of the American people,” McCarthy said following speaking with US President Joe Biden on the phone. The draft law will now be completed overnight and on Sunday – this should be finally approved on Sunday followingnoon in cooperation with Biden. A vote in the House of Representatives is planned for Wednesday.

The draft must be passed in both chambers of Congress and signed by the President as quickly as possible so that an impending US government default is actually averted. US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen recently warned that the money might run out on June 5th. This was preceded by an intense argument that even prompted US President Joe Biden to cancel trips abroad.

In the United States, parliament sets a debt ceiling at irregular intervals and determines how much money the state can borrow. In the meantime, this debt ceiling of around 31.4 trillion US dollars has been reached and the Treasury must tap into the capital reserves. Biden and his Democrats need the Republicans in Congress to raise the debt ceiling.

Although the final details of the deal and the exact position of the White House remained unclear, McCarthy said the Democrats had agreed to “historic spending cuts” and that the text did not contain any new taxes or government programs.

The Republicans had wanted to urge Biden to make savings in the social sector, for example, in return for an increase in the debt limit. McCarthy, for example, called for people who receive certain social benefits to have a job in return. Biden’s Democrats don’t want that. Instead, they wanted to close “tax loopholes” – specifically: tax the rich more heavily. Republicans are opposed to this.

The months-long dispute had brought the United States to the brink of insolvency. If this had actually happened, a subsequent global financial crisis might have triggered a sharp economic downturn. The US would then no longer be able to pay most of its bills – millions of people might have lost their jobs as a result.

The dispute had meanwhile even threatened the creditworthiness of the USA. The rating agency Fitch retained the top rating “AAA” for the world’s largest economy on Wednesday evening (local time), but lowered the outlook for creditworthiness to “negative”, so that a downgrade might be threatened.

But the next hurdle will be the vote in the House of Representatives on Wednesday. The situation there is particularly muddled because the Republicans only have a very narrow majority. There are also radical MPs in the parliamentary group who show no interest in a realistic compromise. At the beginning of the year, McCarthy was only elected chairman of the parliamentary chamber by his group following a historic election chaos. This had greatly weakened his position.

The dispute over the debt limit is now a major test for McCarthy, in which he must deliver results for his party. He must also succeed in rallying a few radicals behind a possible agreement in order to have the broadest possible majority in his party. If he had to rely on a particularly large number of votes from the Democrats because his party colleagues opposed him, that would further weaken him.

The dispute had also cast a shadow over Biden’s trip to the G7 summit in Japan – Biden continued to negotiate during the trip. He had repeatedly emphasized that 78 times in US history it had been possible to prevent a default.

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