3

Government wants credit limit raise

The White House

To view this content, Javascript must be enabled and Adobe Flash Player must be installed.

Get Adobe Flash player

TEXT OF STORY

KAI RYSSDAL: Even though it may not seem like it -- given the way Washington's been spending money the past year or so -- there is a limit to how much the government can borrow. Right now the U.S. credit limit, or the "debt ceiling" as those in the know like to call it, is $12.1 trillion. We're just about there. Which means within the next month or so the White House is going to have to ask Congress for an increase, to as much as $13 trillion.

From Washington, Marketplace's Steve Henn reports.


Steve Henn: Thirteen trillion dollars -- that's roughly the size of the whole U.S. economy. And right now, the government is almost entirely dependent on foreign lenders to keep the lights on.

David Walker: If foreign lenders lose confidence in our ability to put our government's financial house in order, we could experience a dramatic decline in the dollar and a dramatic increase in interest rates.

David Walker is the former head of the Government Accountability Office. He warned the Senate Budget Committee earlier this week the country is walking the razor's edge.

Walker: We will face an economic crisis much bigger than the current one, if we pass a tipping point and we don't start to put our act together pretty soon.

The Administration borrowed aggressively to fight this economic collapse. But what worries experts is the long term outlook.

Bob Bixby at the Concord Coalition says without changes, in 25 years today's baby boomers will swell our yawning deficits.

Bob Bixby: If instead of a $1.4 trillion deficit, we'd have a $2.2 trillion deficit.

The solution? Trimming Social Security and Medicare and raising taxes. But politically, that's toxic. So a group of Senate moderates is trying to force the issue. They want to form a bipartisan commission to make the tough calls. Then both Houses of Congress would get one shot at voting the deal up or down. No amendments, no changes.

We reached Democrat Kent Conrad on his cellphone in Fargo, N.D.

Kent Conrad: The regular order does not work well when you face a challenge of this magnitude. We are on an unsustainable course as a nation.

Liberals in the House and Senate say a commission could force unacceptable cuts. And the Administration hasn't endorsed the idea either. But the government desperately needs a credit line increase. And before that happens, Conrad wants to force it into credit counseling.

In Washington, I'm Steve Henn for Marketplace.

About the author

Steve Henn was Marketplace’s technology and innovation reporter for the entire portfolio of Marketplace programs until December 2011.
Jim Stanley's picture
Jim Stanley - Nov 15, 2009

Kai Ryssdal kicks it off with: "Even though it may not seem like it -- given the way Washington's been spending money the past year or so..."

Excuse me, Mr. Ryssdal, but... the past YEAR or so? Where have you been for the last 9 years? The previous Administration and four Congresses put two wars on the national credit card (not to mention the Medicare Part D pharma giveaway and a slew of tax breaks for wealthy Americans). All of a sudden Washington's spending money? It's been happening for the last DECADE or so, bub.

Phillip Michaels's picture
Phillip Michaels - Nov 13, 2009

Marketplace needs to bring to its listeners discussions that don't start as political talking points. Mr. Henn offered listeners the problem of national deficits. Deficits are the problem? How exactly will balancing the budget get people working again? With a deficit straw man in place, the solutions offered are limited to, "Trimming Social Security and Medicare and raising taxes." What about trimming the military, or the CIA? The discussion in this segment would have been much better spent discussing what we are spending our pump priming funds on instead of whipping up foolish deficit fears.

Jonathan Lovelace's picture
Jonathan Lovelace - Nov 13, 2009

The government doesn't need a "credit line increase"; it needs budget cuts. ("Cuts" isn't strong enough a word. Neither is "decimations," which only signifies a one-tenth reduction.) This may be politically unpopular, but the current Congress and administration has been ignoring public opinion right, left, and center; why start paying attention to it now?