House
passes 'Pay China First' Act
The
Republican-controlled United States House of Representatives approved
a bill on Thursday that would require the government to begin paying
back foreign nations before spending funds on domestic items.
RT,
9
May, 2013
House
Resolution 807, The Full Faith and Credit Act, mandates rules to go
into effect should Congress fail to raise the country’s borrowing
limit and the debt ceiling is reached.
If
signed into law, the bill would outline an order in which the US
would be required to pay off its debts: first people on Social
Security and holders of US bonds would be compensated, and then items
like Medicare and military benefits would be dealt with.
Because
the government would have to settle up its debt with bond holders
first, foreign nations — particularly China — would be the first
to receive payment in theory. Opponents of the bill has thus labeled
HR 807 the “Pay China First Act,” a moniker that House Speaker
John Boehner (R-Ohio) didn’t disagree with in an interview just
days before it was passed.
“Those
who have loaned us money, like in any other proceeding, if you will,
court proceeding, the bondholders usually get paid first. Same thing
here," Boehner told Bloomberg TV host Peter Cook on Tuesday.
"Our
goal here is to get ourselves on a sustainable path from a fiscal
standpoint," Boehner said. "I think doing a debt
prioritization bill makes it clear to our bondholders that we’re
going to meet our obligations."
But
although a handful of Democrats in the House agreed to advance the
bill, the largely left-leaning Senate is expected to shoot down the
act when it arrives for discussion shortly. Additionally, the White
House has warned that US President Barack Obama will veto the bill
should it make it out of Congress and end up in the Oval Office.
In
a statement issued earlier this week, the White House wrote that the
administration opposes HR 807 because it would result in Congress
refusing to pay some obligations it has already agreed to, instead
prioritizing payments in a way that won’t favor the American
people.
“American
families do not get to choose which bills to pay and which ones not
to pay, and the United States Congress cannot either without putting
the Nation into default for the first time in its history,” the
White House wrote. “This bill would threaten the full faith and
credit of the United States, cost American jobs, hurt businesses of
all sizes, and do damage to the economy.”
Both
the White House and Senate democrats have condemned the bill because
national security and veteran benefits would be put on the backburner
in lieu of compensating China, who held roughly 8 percent of the
money borrowed by the US government as of last September.
The
House approved the act by a vote of 221-207. Congress has until
around October to discuss how to pay the country’s bills — at
which point it is expected to hit its borrowing limit.
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