Tuesday, 1 October 2013

Government shutdown and shutdown of the USA


Probable government shutdown, with possible debt default to come



30 September, 2013

Some people I know are glad (all things considered) about the apparently pending government shutdown – not that they actually want it, but simply because, if something bad is bound to happen, a debt default would be even worse. If it’s one or the other – shutdown or default – they are certainly right about this. But that’s not to say that we won’t end up with both.

If it does come down to a debt default, I am glad to see that the Neil Buchanan-Michael Dorf argument, to the effect that issuing debt above the ceiling would be less illegal than any of the other options President Obama would have (such as declining to spend appropriated funds) is catching on, such as in today’s New York Times op-ed by Henry Aaron. Legally speaking, the Buchanan-Dorf analysis strikes me as plausible enough. (Given the lack of clear criteria for defining “correct” legal answers in advance, there often really is no answer until something emerges through the actual legal process, unpredictably even if in the end authoritatively.) And their approach not only is much less goofy than issuing a platinum coin, but strikes me as more circumspect than a Fourteenth Amendment-based approach. Moreover, while the Obama Administration certainly should not suggest in advance that it would breach the debt ceiling, doing so on the back end might make sense, perhaps as chaos increasingly loomed and after having demonstrated that a selective payment approach was unfeasible.

But the “least illegal course” approach raises an empirical question that cannot be tested in advance, to the effect of how the markets would actually react to debt issuance that contravened the ceiling. House Republicans would no doubt be doing their best to create financial market havoc, by shouting that the debt was legally invalid. And while the debt no doubt would eventually be honored (whether via judicial decision or Congressional action), things could get ugly in the meantime, and leave the U.S. with a permanently stained fiscal reputation.

Even if the this fall’s contrived crises play out relatively well, however, we are still on a “Breaking Bad” path as a country. (Yes, I spent the entire late summer through last night enraptured by the show, although, pending re-viewing, I found the final episode perhaps a bit too neat.) Especially in a non-parliamentary system with multiple veto-like choke points, it’s hard to survive having a sizable and powerful group – maybe 20 percent of registered voters, but a primary-day voting majority in one of the parties – that would rather blow up everything than not get its own way. This is potentially at least as dangerous as domestic terrorism, and perhaps more so.



US Government shutdown makes a really disastrous debt ceiling default scenario more likely

1 October, 2013

Complacent assumptions about the US recovery should be thrown out of the window as the US Government starts what may be a long shutdown. This is going to impact on discussions to raise the US debt ceiling this month bringing a really disastrous US debt default scenario into focus. Remember we were told a shutdown would not happen, so what about the first US federal default?

Labaton Sucharow’s Jordan Thomas and Mitsubishi UFJ Securities USA’s John Hermmann discuss the economic effects of a government shutdown with Pimm Fox on Bloomberg Television’s ‘Taking Stock’…



Shutdown showdown
America’s path from fiscal improbity to political impasse

30 September, 2013

ONCE a stalwart of good governance, America looks like a rodeo clown. 

If the House and Senate cannot agree to continue funding for discretionary spending by midnight on September 30th, the federal government will experience one of its periodic shutdowns. 

There have been 10 such episodes since 1981, the date of the first one under the current budget-making rules, so a brief hiatus in government functions need not be frightening. Some non-essential services would be suspended and inconvenience caused—in addition to sending the US Treasury market into mild gyrations. 

Far worse is the idea that Congress might fail to authorise the raising of the debt ceiling in mid-October. Republicans in Congress have a shopping list of demands in exchange for allowing this; the president has said he will not negotiate. 

If America were in real danger of missing a debt payment it is likely that President Obama would find some constitutional justification for ignoring Congress rather than set off a financial meltdown



1 comment:

  1. With a possibility of another government shutdown due to lack of unity, I guess it is wise if people will acquire an income insurance for extra protection.

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