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#1
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WI No Debt Ceiling Debacle
It's been about a year now since the US came w/in hours of defaulting on it's debt, and the credit rating took a hit as a result. Suppose that in 2010, Congress had gotten around to passing a budget and subsequently raising the ceiling -- so that the crisis of OTL doesn't happen in 2011?
First, does the economy fare better, and if so, how much better? How would the political dialogue of 2011 to present be affected? And what other butterflies might there be?
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#2
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It seems like you're going to have the same problem in the long run. As for if no debacle... I don't know why it would have much of an impact. I suppose with no immintent concern over default might make speculators less jumpy.
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#3
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Well if nothing else, it cost the Federal Government -- $1.3 billion according to the GAO...
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#4
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Apparently it dramatically slowed the recovery by about six months to a year or so.
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#5
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Quote:
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#6
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The political capital that could have passed a 2010 budget was spent on the Affordable Care Act. The contrast with Clinton's 1993 budget (but no heath care reform) is instructive.
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#7
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Normally, passing a budget doesn't, in itself, take too much political capital -- that really only comes in to play if it's used to push things like spending cuts and/or raising taxes, something that didn't really feature prominently in the Administration's proposed budget for 2011...
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#8
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The 1993 budget combined spending cuts and tax hikes, and in the event it passed by a single vote in both houses. A budget 'costing' little politically (continued Bush tax cuts, say) would not have been worth passing.
ok, I'm stricken with parliament envy
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#9
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That's more or less what Obama wanted (sans those making over $250,000 a year); whether it would be "worth passing" depends on your standard. For the purposes of this thread, that's just letting Congress know to where they need to raise the debt ceiling by year's end so they don't have to in 2011.
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#10
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#11
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That's certainly a point for the Debt Ceiling being inevitable post Tea-Party eventually, maybe even as soon as 2012,* but right I'm only looking at avoiding it for 2011 -- one step at a time...
*though if the GoP pulled off this crap in an election year, that would be another layer of... well, it'd make it even harder for their party come November
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#12
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I don't think that it's really possible to avoid this event…
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#13
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WI the law assumed that any gap between authorised taxation and authroised expeinditure was simply authorised debt
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#14
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The republicans would throw a fit over that, i suspect if you stopped this it'd show up in another battle someplace else. The republicans painted themselves into a corner with the "make him a one term president" line.
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#15
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How far could you actually raise that Debt Ceiling without it affecting the USA's international credit rating?
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#16
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Really, the ceiling itself could be set at infinity and it wouldn't hurt America's credit rating, probably even helping it (now actual level of debt, on the other hand...)
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Last edited by John Fredrick Parker; August 13th, 2012 at 04:52 AM.. Reason: spelling |
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#17
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So, what happens to the US once the banks refuse to lend money? Considering that given the current state of US Debt and the way its increasing, its quite obvious that without significant changes in Taxation and Spending Policy that long term, the US CANNOT service that debt.
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#18
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#19
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Plus if China tried to cut credit, US purchasing power would suffer, badly enough Chinese exports would plummet to the point their economy collapses (and with it, their political order).
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#20
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And not just China for that matter, Saudi Arabia, Japan, Canada and a number of countries that rely upon us would suffer horribly. However, I don't quite think this will come to pass, given the Americans (though not the American government) have been pulling back from the brink in regards to debt.
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