What to Know in Washington: US Debt-Limit Distress Returns 2023

Washington and Wall Street are well accustomed to the partisan brinkmanship over the US federal debt limit, but the battle looming in 2023 carries a major economic risk at a time when the US may have slumped into a recession.

Negotiations will be crucially shaped by the outcome of the Nov. 8 congressional election. If forecasts bear out, Republicans will assume control of at least the House, and some GOP lawmakers are vowing to demand spending cuts as the price for increasing the statutory debt ceiling.

Photographer: Eric Lee/Bloomberg
House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) speaks at the US Capitol in Washington, D.C., on July 27.

“If we go into recession, the response normally is stimulative fiscal policy, but it seems like the appetite for that may be waning. So that could exacerbate any downturn,” said Michael Feroli, chief US economist at JPMorgan Chase & Co.

While a shift toward fiscal tightening now might help in the battle to cool US inflation, the debt-limit fight is expected to come around the third quarter of 2023, by when most economists see price gains having come well down.

Feroli noted potential similarities to the debt-limit crisis of 2011. Republicans took over the House in the 2010 midterm elections and proceeded to use the debt limit as leverage in fiscal debates.

“It seems like we’re setting up for probably a pretty stressful episode again,” Feroli said. “I don’t know how to scale it,” he said of the danger of a payments default, though still characterizing it as a tail risk. Steven T. Dennis previews the showdown.

Yellen Warns Republicans Not to Hold US ‘Hostage’ on Debt Limit

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said congressional Republicans must not risk forcing the US to default on its debt in order to further their agenda because the results could be “calamitous.”

Happening on the Hill

House GOP Questions Yellen on Improperly Issued Recovery Rebates

House Republican leaders are seeking documents from the Treasury Department related to alleged misuse of funds from the American Rescue Plan Act, saying stimulus checks were improperly distributed.

House GOP Demands Answers From Yellen on ProPublica Leaks

House Republicans on the Ways and Means Committee demanded an update from Yellen on an investigation into how private taxpayer information was leaked to nonprofit news organization ProPublica.

Trump Loses Latest Bid to Block Tax Returns From House Panel

A federal appeals court rejected former President Donald Trump’s request to reconsider a ruling that his tax returns must be disclosed to a congressional committee.

Elections, Politics & Probes

Join BGOV’s Final Pre-Election Webinar: Bloomberg Government’s election gurus will provide their outlook for the 2022 midterms on a Nov. 1 webinar. They’ll offer their take on the issues driving the battle for control of Congress and the key races to watch in the election’s final week. Register here .

The Redrawn House Districts on the Razor’s Edge: BGOV OnPoint

BGOV has been highlighting some of the closest congressional contests following redistricting in our “Razor’s Edge Races” series of district profiles that ran weekly in the Ballots & Boundaries newsletter and are now presented in one place in a BGOV OnPoint.

Nevada Races Show Democrats’ Struggle to Find Economic Message

Democrats are grappling with how to respond to inflation, and in no place is it more crucial they get it right than Nevada, where the state’s tourism-based economy was hit hard by Covid-19. How Democrats fare there on Nov. 8 will be a bellwether for their fortunes in 2024—and beyond.

Trump Shells Out $20 Million to Support His Senate Candidates

Trump dug into his $92 million war chest, the largest in the Republican Party, and sent $20 million in October to an allied super PAC that’s supporting Senate candidates he’s endorsed, according to Federal Election Commission filings.

Musk Closes $44 Billion Twitter Deal, Ending Monthslong Saga

Elon Musk completed his $44 billion acquisition of Twitter, according to people familiar with the matter, putting the world’s richest man in charge of the struggling social network after six months of public and legal wrangling over the deal.

Schwarzenegger Goads GOP in Court Over ‘Nuts’ Election Theory

Former California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said his fellow Republicans are pushing a “nuts” legal theory in a pivotal US Supreme Court case that would allow state lawmakers to draw partisan redistricting maps without fear of judicial oversight.

‘I Am Running for the Money,’ Barrack Said of Trump 2016 Role

Tom Barrack was grilled by a federal prosecutor over a 2016 text message he sent to a friend who teased him about his work for Trump’s presidential campaign.

Elite College Admissions Cases Put Justices on Collision Course

A showdown over college affirmative action at the US Supreme Court next week pits the court’s liberal wing against Chief Justice John Roberts and his dream of a constitutional ban on racial preferences.

Defense & Foreign Affairs

Biden Questions Putin Claim Russia Won’t Use Nuclear Weapons

President Joe Biden questioned whether Russian leader Vladimir Putin was sincere in saying he has no intention of using nuclear or chemical weapons in Ukraine. “If he has no intention, why’s he keep talking about it?” Biden said after he was asked if he believes Putin’s denials in an interview with NewsNation, a cable outlet, that aired Thursday.

  • Putin on Thursday lashed out at the US and Europe, heaped praise on Saudi Arabia and reiterated support for China’s claim to Taiwan as he sought to cast Russia as a champion of conservatism against Western liberalism. Read more

Biden Says Xi ‘Concerned’ About Boost in US Chipmaking

Biden said China’s leader had expressed worries about the US strengthening its domestic production of semiconductor chips as his administration moves to reduce reliance on Asian suppliers and restrict Chinese access to chipmaking technology.

Around the Administration

PRESIDENT’S SCHEDULE

  • Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris deliver remarks at a reception for the Pennsylvania Democratic Party in Philadelphia at 7 p.m.

Biden Calls on Oil Companies to Cut Prices After Shell Profit

Biden criticized record energy company profits after Shell announced it earned $9.5 billion in the third quarter, raised its dividend and expanded share buybacks.

  • Biden said that some Americans are “better off” due to pay raises and strong employment growth under his presidency, even with high inflation eroding their purchasing power. Read more
  • Household spending is under pressure but unemployment is sitting at a five-decade low. Major companies are sending conflicting earnings messages, leaving the stock market confused. Read more
  • About 100 million Americans weren’t working in early October, according the Census Bureau, and some of the reasons may come as a surprise. Read more

Biden Predicts Student Loan Relief Checks Within Two Weeks

Biden said his administration would prevail in lawsuits challenging his student debt relief plan and predicted applicants would start getting checks within two weeks. “We’re going to win that case,” Biden said in an interview with NewsNation, a cable outlet.

Biden’s Climate Goals Challenged by Where to Make EV Chargers

The dueling pressures of rapidly deploying electric vehicle chargers around the country—while complying with federal Buy America rules—could threaten Biden’s climate agenda.

Biden Hits Fresh Bumps in Plan to Smooth Trade Ties With EU

US allies in the EU are citing unfairness in the Biden administration’s most recent industrial policies, including about $370 billion of clean-energy subsides in the Inflation Reduction Act.

White House Permit Office Works to Bulk Up After Funding Boost

The federal consulting shop that helps agencies work on environmental permits is bulking up, adding staff and extending its reach into new sectors of the economy, the head of the office says.

Lawsuit Over Trump Power Plant Rules on Hold Pending EPA Update

An appellate panel won’t issue an order allowing the Trump administration’s carbon power plant rules to stay in effect while the EPA crafts new standards slated for next year.

Medicare Mental Health Proposals Expand Aid for Substance Abuse

America’s opioid crisis and the Covid pandemic have renewed calls from lawmakers and advocates to modernize and expand Medicare’s behavioral health coverage. And the Biden administration is listening.

Biden’s Women’s Bureau Targets Child Care, Diversity, Bias: Q&A

A small US Labor Department subagency tasked with identifying women’s issues in the labor force will be a key player in ensuring that the Biden administration’s workforce investments lift up women who are typically left out of the male-dominated trades.

To contact the reporter on this story: Brandon Lee in Washington at blee@bgov.com

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Giuseppe Macri at gmacri@bgov.com; Loren Duggan at lduggan@bgov.com

Top