|
By Associated Press
August 3, 2004
WASHINGTON -- The United States could face the prospect of not
being able to pay its bills this fall unless Congress raises government
borrowing authority now capped at $7.4 trillion, Treasury Secretary
John Snow said yesterday.
In a letter to House and Senate members, Snow said the government
is expected to reach the current statutory ceiling on the national
debt by late September or early October.
Even if Treasury takes steps to juggle accounts to stay just under
the limit to avoid defaulting on the debt, "we can finance
government operations no longer than mid-to-late November,"
Snow wrote. The government has performed such maneuvers in the past.
He urged Congress to raise the debt limit as soon as possible.
But, he did not suggest a specific amount.
Economists doubt Congress will reject Snow's call. A federal default
is considered unimaginable because it would rattle bond markets
and force interest rates higher.
Democrats cite the government's need to boost the debt limit as
evidence that President Bush is mishandling the economy. The administration
says fighting terrorism at home and abroad is among the reasons
government borrowing has gone up.
The government expects to tap $89 billion from credit markets this
quarter, slightly less than an earlier estimate because of higher
than expected revenues, the Treasury Department said in a separate
report.
Treasury needs to borrow to finance the daily operation of the
government, including meeting interest payments on the national
debt, which now stands at nearly $7.3 trillion.
The White House last week said it expected this year's federal
budget deficit to clock in at $445 billion -- less red ink than
it estimated earlier this year. The Congressional Budget Office
is predicting a $477 billion deficit. In any case, the deficit would
be a record in dollar terms.
Mortgage
Rates News, Mortgage News, Financial News
|