Plus: No recession yet, as economy grew 2.1% in 2022
â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â â [The Fisc]( Â Â By Yuval Rosenberg and Michael Rainey We hope you had a good Thursday. President Joe Biden on Thursday celebrated some solid economic data and lambasted âMAGA Republicans in the House of Representativesâ who he said are threatening to âdestroyâ the progress made under his administration. Republicans, meanwhile, are reportedly considering an idea to gain leverage in the coming fight over the debt limit. Hereâs what you should know. Biden in Virginia (Reuters) Biden Warns GOP Agenda Would Bring Chaos
As Republicans and Democrats gird for a prolonged fight over the debt ceiling, President Biden on Thursday attacked the GOP for ideas that he said could result in economic chaos. At an event held in a union facility in Springfield, Virginia, to tout his economic agenda, Biden went through a list of GOP proposals. He said Republicans are looking to slash Social Security and Medicare benefits and are threatening to default on Americaâs debt. âThis one I love: They want to impose a 30% national sales tax on everything from food, clothing, school supplies, housing, cars, the whole deal,â he said, citing a plan proposed by some House conservatives. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) has promised to bring that plan, called the FAIR Tax Act, up for a vote, though he also told reporters this week that he opposes it. Biden promised he would âveto everythingâ House Republicans send to him. And he said again that he wonât negotiate over raising the debt limit. âI will not let anyone use the full faith and credit of the United States as a bargaining chip,â Biden said. âIn the United States of America, we pay our debts.â Bidenâs comments come as he and Republicans led by McCarthy appear destined for a drawn-out confrontation over the nationâs economic policies, debt limit and government spending. âWashington Democratsâ $10 trillion spending spree created a vicious cycle of deficit spending leading to high inflation and rising interest rates that are crushing families and small businesses,â House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith (R-MO) said in a statement Thursday. Smith called on Biden and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) to negotiate on spending cuts. âUnless Congress can get a handle on its spending problem, the American people worry the economy will not deliver for them,â he said. Republicans Considering a Short-Term Debt Limit Suspension: Report
House Republicans are reportedly considering one or more short-term suspensions of the debt limit â not just to defuse the threat of a potentially catastrophic default but to maximize their leverage as they try to force Democrats to engage in negotiations on spending cuts. Roll Callâs Paul M. Krawzak [reported]( Wednesday evening that House Republicans are âmullingâ buying some more time in the debt limit clash, potentially matching up the deadline for an increase in the borrowing cap with the end of the fiscal year â a move that would more closely align the debt and spending issues House GOP lawmakers are trying to link together. âSources familiar with the talks described them as preliminary and subject to change after discussing with the House GOP rank and file,â Krawzak says. âBut there has been support within the conference for the basic idea of tying the two deadlines together â the debt limit âx dateâ and the end of the fiscal year âto create more pressure for a deal.â Krawzak adds that any short-term measure would likely suspend the debt limit rather than raise it. âThat would presumably make it easier for Republicans to swallow voting for it after pledging to only back a debt limit increase if paired with spending cuts,â he explains. Where we go from here: The debt limit fight between Republicans and Democrats is only just beginning and is sure to see plenty of twists and turns as we approach the deadline later this year to avert a potentially catastrophic default. Politicoâs Adam Cancryn and Eugene Daniels [report]( that some experts are worried that this standoff wonât be resolved without significant pain: âFrom the White House to Wall Street, a growing number of veterans of the 2011 debt ceiling crisis are again watching a story of bluster and brinkmanship play out â and are terrified this will be the time it ends with the country in financial ruin.â Brendan Buck, who was an aide to Republican House Speaker John Boehner in 2011 told Politico that the challenges this year may be greater than they were back then. And Dan Pfeiffer, who was an advisor to President Obama, told Politico that McCarthy may be less amenable to dealing that Boehner was. âBoehner may have been willing to put more of his ass on the line. He did intellectually and substantively understand why default was terrible,â Pfeiffer said. âIâm not sure that McCarthy understands that, that McCarthy cares, that McCarthy would value the full faith and credit of the United States over his own job.â No Recession Yet: Economy Grew 2.1% in 2022
Plenty of people from Wall Street to Main Street are worried about a possible recession, but data released Thursday showed that the U.S. economy continued to grow at a solid pace at the end of last year, even as the rate of growth softened amid high inflation and rising interest rates. Gross domestic product grew by 2.9% in the fourth quarter of 2022, the Bureau of Economic Analysis announced Thursday in its initial estimate for the period. The results beat expectations in the range of 2.6% to 2.8%, with growth driven by consumer spending on services, business investment and inventory replenishment. For all of 2022, the economy grew 2.1% â a strong performance given the negative growth recorded in the first half of the year and the Federal Reserveâs interest rate hikes totaling a cumulative 4.5 percentage points throughout the year. Measured from fourth quarter to fourth quarter, GDP grew just 1%, down from 5.7% in 2021. âThe economy is slowing, but the above-forecast number will ease recession fears at the same time,â Fawad Razaqzada, an analyst at City Index, [told]( Bloomberg. âThey call this the âGoldilocksâ scenario.â Celebrating a âremarkableâ recovery: The White House touted the news, with President Joe Biden [tweeting]( âOur economic plan worked. And it still is.â Many analysts agree that, whatever the cause, the recovery has been remarkable, with the economy in better shape than many had expected, given the challenges. âSometimes you need to look at the big picture,â [says]( Heather Long of The Washington Post. âIt's been an incredible rebound from the 2020 pandemic recession. The US has recovered all output lost in the crisis and gotten back on trend.â Inflation remains too high, as does poverty, Long added. âBut to recover all jobs and output in basically 2 years is remarkable.â Gray clouds on the horizon: Despite the solid growth numbers, many analysts and business leaders still expect the economy to slide into a recession at some point this year, driven by the Fedâs campaign to tighten the screws on economic activity by raising interest rates and restricting the money supply. The Fed is expected to raise rates again next week, with most analysts projecting an increase of 25 basis points. Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macro, [noted]( that nearly half of the GDP growth last quarter involved inventory restocking, which is unlikely to be sustained over time. The growth in final domestic spending was less than 1%, which Shepherdson says points to weaker results in the first quarter of 2023. âYou may see [growth] and think the economy is out of the woods, but that would be entirely the wrong read,â Joseph LaVorgna, chief economist at SMBC Nikko Securities America, [told]( The Washington Post. âThere are a lot of variables that are all pointing in the same direction: Thereâs a housing recession. Manufacturing looks like itâs approaching recession. Weâre seeing weakness in temp hiring. And itâs doubtful weâve felt the full effects of all of the Fedâs rate hikes.â Goldman Sachs Chief Economist Jan Hatzius said this week that he sees a 35% chance of recession ahead, but Joseph Brusuelas, chief economist at the consulting firm RSM, puts the odds of recession at 65%. --------------------------------------------------------------- Send your feedback to yrosenberg@thefiscaltimes.com.
--------------------------------------------------------------- News - [Biden: I Wonât Let GOP Use Debt Ceiling as âBargaining Chipâ]( â The Hill
- [Splits Emerge as U.S. House Republicans Demand Biden Negotiate on Debt Limit]( â Reuters
- [House GOP Considering âCleanâ Short-Term Debt Limit Suspension]( â Roll Call
- [Republicans Demand Spending Cuts to Lift the Debt Limit. They Wonât Say What to Cut]( â NBC News
- [U.S. Rep. Chip Roy Says Heâll Use Debt Ceiling Threat to Push Through His Border Security Plan]( â Texas Tribune
- [Veterans of the Obama-Era Debt Ceiling Standoff on the Current One: We May Be Doomed]( â Politico
- [McCarthyâs Moderate Republican Allies Have Their Own Debt-Ceiling Ideas]( â Bloomberg
- [Democrats Grapple Over Whether Biden Should Negotiate With McCarthy on Raising Debt Limit]( â The Hill
- [Senate GOPâs âBreakfast Clubâ Wants to Shape Debt-Limit Debate]( â Bloomberg
- [Sen. Rick Scott Is Running for Re-Election Pushing His Controversial âRescueâ Plan]( â NBC News
- [HIV at Center of Latest Culture War After Tennessee Rejects Federal Funds]( â Washington Post Views and Analysis - [The Scariest Part of the Debt Ceiling Impasse: Washington Isnât Scared]( â Ramesh Ponnuru, Washington Post
- [Before Itâs Too Late, GOP to Teach Members What the Debt Ceiling Is]( â Steve Benen, MSNBC
- [The Challenge of Cutting the Federal Budget, Visualized]( â Philip Bump, Washington Post
- [Peter Was Already Robbed. He Canât Pay Paul]( â Glenn Kessler, Washington Post
- [Republicans Apparently Expect Joe Biden to Read Their Minds in the Debt Ceiling Standoff]( â Eric Lutz, Vanity Fair
- [Why Republicans Wonât Name Their Debt-Ceiling Demands]( â Ed Kilgore, New York
- [The Debt Limit Is the Worldâs Highest-Stakes Horoscope]( â Josh Bivens, Economic Policy Institute
- [The Freedom Caucus Has a Harebrained Plan to Jack Up Taxes on the Poor]( â Ryan Cooper, American Prospect
- [Why the Fed Should Raise Rates by Half a Percent]( â Mohamed A. El-Erian, Bloomberg
- [The Pentagon Is About to Go on a Weapons-Buying Spree]( â Washington Post Editorial Board
- [Why Industrial Policy Is Back]( â Ricardo Hausmann, Project Syndicate
- [The Discharge Petition Wonât Save Us]( â Joshua Huder, Washington Post
- [The Freedom Caucus Has a Harebrained Plan to Jack Up Taxes on the Poor]( â Ryan Cooper, American Prospect
- [Biden Is Derelict in His Duty on the Debt Limit. It's Time for Him to Step Up and Get In the Game]( â Sen. Mike Crapo (R-ID), Fox News
- [A Record Number of Americans Have Health Insurance, but Churn Is Likely on the Way]( â Rachel Roubein, Washington Post
- [Biden Is Trying to Transform Student Loans]( â Washington Post Editorial Board Copyright © 2023 The Fiscal Times, All rights reserved.
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