Mish Shedlock Blog | Federal Receipts Running Below Expectations: Treasury Seeks “Clean” Debt Ceiling Increase (Removed) | TalkMarkets
Investment Advisor Representative - Sitka Pacific Capital Management
Mike Mish Shedlock is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management. Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. Visit Sitka Pacifics Investment Management Page to learn more ...more

Federal Receipts Running Below Expectations: Treasury Seeks “Clean” Debt Ceiling Increase (Removed)

Date: Wednesday, May 24, 2017 3:52 PM EDT

In yet another sign of a slowing economy, US federal receipts are running below expectations.

As a result, the need to bump up the debt ceiling will come sooner than expected.

Given Republican budget fights and threats in the Obama years, one of them resulting in a partial government shutdown, it will be interesting to see their stance now that Trump is president.

The Wall Street Journal reports US Treasury Secretary Mnuchin Wants Debt-Limit Increase With No Conditions Attached.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin asked Congress to increase the debt limit—without policy conditions attached to it—before lawmakers leave for their summer recess.

Mr. Mnuchin told the House Ways and Means Committee that he favors a so-called clean debt-ceiling increase. That is in opposition to the position that Republicans have taken for the past six years, when they have tried to pair spending cuts with debt-limit increases.

Congress is scheduled to leave Washington around July 28 and return after Labor Day in September.

Earlier Wednesday, White House budget director Mick Mulvaney said the date by which Congress would need to raise the debt limit may come sooner than the administration had anticipated, accelerating a difficult challenge for Republican lawmakers.

“My understanding is that the receipts currently are coming in a little bit slower than expected and you may soon hear from Mnuchin regarding a change in the date,” Mr. Mulvaney told a House panel. Mr. Mnuchin is testifying before the House Ways and Means Committee this afternoon.

A 16-month suspension of the federal borrowing limit expired in March, and the Treasury Department began employing emergency cash-conservation steps soon thereafter to avoid breaching the debt ceiling.

Raising the statutory debt limit will present challenging internal politics for Republicans, who have frequently opposed such increases or insisted on conditions.

The exact timing will be tricky, too. Congress is scheduled to be on recess for most of August, creating a relatively short window for action either before or after.

Now that Republicans are in control we are about to find out how hypocritical about the budget they are. 

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