May 3, 2024

Long Battle on Debt Ending as Senate Set for Final Vote

Despite the tension and uncertainty that has surrounded efforts to raise the debt ceiling, the vote of 269 to 161 was relatively strong in support of the plan, which would cut more than $2.1 trillion in government spending over 10 years while extending the borrowing authority of the Treasury Department. It would also create a powerful new joint Congressional committee to recommend broad changes in spending — and possibly in tax policy — to reduce the deficit.

Scores of Democrats initially held back from voting, to force Republicans to register their positions first. Then, as the time for voting wound down, Representative Gabrielle Giffords, Democrat of Arizona, returned to the floor for the first time since being shot in January and voted for the bill to jubilant applause and embraces from her colleagues. It provided an unexpected, unifying ending to a fierce standoff in the House.

The Senate, where approval is considered likely, is scheduled to vote at noon on Tuesday and then send the measure to Mr. Obama less than 12 hours before the time when the Treasury Department has said it could become unable to meet all of its financial obligations.

The deal sets in motion a substantial shift in fiscal policy at a moment when the economic recovery appears especially fragile. Although the actual spending cuts in the next year or two would be relatively modest in the context of a $3.7 trillion federal budget, they would represent the beginning of a new era of restraint at a time when unemployment remains above 9 percent, growth is slowing and there are few good policy options for giving the economy a stimulative kick.

The precise impact on the economy is a matter of debate. Proponents of spending restraint say that the economy will benefit in the long run from getting the deficit and the accumulated national debt under control, and that failure to act now would risk long-term decline in the nation’s economic might. Others say that by foreclosing the option of using government spending to counteract economic weakness, the country is increasing the risk of persistently high unemployment and even another recession.

The negotiations exposed deep fissures within both parties. In the end, 174 Republicans and 95 Democrats backed the deal, and 66 Republicans and 95 Democrats voted against it. But Republicans and Democrats alike made clear they were not happy swallowing the agreement, which was struck late Sunday between the bipartisan leadership of Congress and President Obama.

Top lawmakers characterized the bill as a must-pass measure needed to prevent a potentially crippling blow to the struggling economy.

“The default of the United States is not an option,” said Representative Steny H. Hoyer of Maryland, the No. 2 Democrat.

Mr. Hoyer urged lawmakers to vote not as members of either party, but as “Americans concerned about the fiscal posture of their country, about the confidence that people around the world have in the American dollar.”

Republicans, while expressing dissatisfaction that the measure did not provide more savings, said it was a modest but useful first step in reversing the government’s spending course and claimed they had prevailed by keeping the agreement free of new revenue and offsetting the increase in the debt limit with spending cuts.

“I would like to say this bill solves our problems,” said Representative Jeb Hensarling of Texas, a prominent fiscal hawk in the Republican leadership. “It doesn’t. It is a solid  first step.”

Worried about defections by conservatives and liberals alike, leaders of both parties gathered their members for briefings to explain the proposal. Speaker John A. Boehner met specially with Republicans on the House Armed Services Committee, an important voting bloc whose members were raising alarms about potential spending cuts for the Pentagon.

Democrats, many disgruntled over what they saw as a White House-negotiated giveaway to Republicans, heard from Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr., who told House and Senate members in separate meetings that the administration had to cut the deal with uncompromising Republicans to avoid a default.

Mr. Biden spent hours behind closed doors in the Capitol. According to participants in the meetings, he mixed listening and gentle persuasion, urging Democrats to back the plan.

Administration officials fanned out to make a case that the deal’s structure — with a trigger that could force deep cuts in military spending as well as in domestic programs if the two parties cannot agree on how to reduce the deficit further — provided Democrats with more leverage to push for higher tax revenue as part of the solution rather than relying totally on spending cuts.

But many Democrats said they saw it as a deal negotiated on the backs of poor and working-class Americans, with no sacrifice by the rich in the form of tax increases.

“I wouldn’t call it anger, but we are perplexed that it has turned out like it has,” said Representative G. K. Butterfield, Democrat of North Carolina, grimacing as he left the Biden meeting. “But we’ve run out of options and we know the consequences. I’ve heard horror stories from the Great Depression. I don’t want my fingerprints on that.”

Jeff Zeleny and Jennifer Steinhauer contributed reporting.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=01b40c80364f098b80b75c80ada4fa68

German Banks Agree to Roll Over Greek Debt

The banks and insurance companies will commit to providing financing for a Greek aid package, Mr. Schäuble told a news conference in Berlin, according to Reuters.

The agency quoted him saying that as a minimum, the Greek debt held by German groups that matures by 2014 would be rolled over, or extended. He also said that 55 percent of Greek bonds held by German institutions would mature after 2020.

At the same event, the Deutsche Bank chief executive, Josef Ackermann, said a French proposal was being used as a basis for the German agreement, although modifications would be built into that plan.

German and French lenders are the biggest foreign holders of Greek debt. And the involvement of private creditors is seen as crucial in international agreement on a second bailout for the crippled Greek economy.

A separate hurdle was passed Wednesday after Prime Minister George A. Papandreou of Greece won the passage of a bill setting new government spending cuts and revenue-raising steps.

Mr. Schäuble said that he was confident that an agreement on the terms of a new aid deal could be fleshed among euro-area finance ministers at a meeting July 3.

Under the complex French plan, banks agreed to roll over 70 percent of their Greek bonds falling due from July 2011 to June 2014, while pocketing the remaining 30 percent for themselves. Of the amount to be rolled over, just over two-thirds would be reinvested in new Greek securities with a maturity of 30 years that paid a coupon close to the current official interest rate on the loans to Greece.

The remaining securities, just under one-third, would be invested in a separate “guarantee fund,” consisting of zero-coupon bonds with triple-A ratings.

The Deutsche Bank chief, Mr. Ackermann, was quoted as saying Wednesday by Bloomberg News that financial companies would contribute to the bailout to help avert a “meltdown.” Banks would “offer our hand in a solution,” Mr. Ackermann said.

Commerzbank’s chief executive Martin Blessing, speaking in Berlin Wednesday, said German financial institutions had reached a draft agreement on participation in a Greek rescue, although there are still “a few hitches.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/01/business/global/01iht-euro01.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Economix: Fiscal Contraction Hurts Growth

Today's Economist

Simon Johnson, the former chief economist at the International Monetary Fund, is the co-author of “13 Bankers.”

The United States has a large budget deficit and a ratio of debt to gross domestic product that, in most projections, continues to rise over time. Some House and Senate Republicans are arguing strongly that this situation calls for big, immediate cuts in government spending — for example, as part of any agreement to increase the federal government’s debt ceiling.

The Joint Economic Committee of Congress held a hearing on Tuesday to discuss whether such spending cuts would be contractionary or expansionary for the economy in the short run. After taking part as a witness at the hearing, I conclude that large immediate spending cuts would tend to slow the economy.

The general presumption is that fiscal contraction — cutting spending or raising taxes, or both — will immediately slow the economy relative to the growth it would have had otherwise. (Of course, some lawmakers and candidates call for cutting spending and cutting taxes, too. This would not lower the deficit, and, most likely, in the short term it would also lower growth, because the spending cuts will be more contractionary than the tax cuts are expansionary, in part for the reasons discussed below.)

But some studies have found that in particular instances, fiscal contractions — meaning deficit-reduction measures — have been consistent with no deceleration of economic growth. The International Monetary Fund produced the most balanced recent assessment of the available evidence in Chapter 3 of its October 2010 World Economic Outlook, “Will It Hurt? Macroeconomic Effects of Fiscal Consolidation.” (I was chief economist at the I.M.F. but left in August 2008 and had nothing to do with this study.)

Under four conditions, fiscal contractions can be expansionary. But none of these conditions is likely to apply in the United States today.

First, if there is high perceived sovereign default risk, fiscal contraction can potentially lower long-term interest rates. But the United States is currently among the countries with the lowest perceived risk — hence the widespread use of the dollar as a reserve asset.

To the extent there is pressure on long-term interest rates in the United States today because of fiscal concerns, these are mostly about the longer-term issues involving health care spending; if this spending were to be credibly constrained (e.g., in plausible projections for 2030 or 2050), long rates should fall.

In contrast, cutting discretionary spending, which is a relatively small part of the federal budget, would have little impact on the market assessment of our longer-term fiscal stability.

Second, it is highly unlikely that short-term spending cuts would directly increase confidence among households or companies, particularly with employment still around 5 percent below its precrisis level. The United States still has a significant “output gap” between actual and potential G.D.P., so unemployment is significantly above the achievable rate. Fiscal contractions rarely inspire confidence in such a situation.

Third, if monetary policy becomes more expansionary while fiscal policy contracts, this can offset to some degree the negative short-run effects of spending cuts on the economy. But in the United States today, short-term interest rates are as low as they can be and the Federal Reserve has already engaged in a substantial amount of “quantitative easing” to bring down interest rates on longer-term debt.

It is unclear that much more monetary policy expansion would be advisable, or possible, in the view of the Fed, even if unemployment increases again — as it might if fiscal contraction involves laying off government workers.

Fourth, tighter fiscal policy and easier monetary policy can, in small, open economies with flexible exchange rates, push down (that is, depreciate) the relative value of the currency — thus increasing exports and making it easier for domestic producers to compete against imports. But this is unlikely to happen in the United States, in part because other industrialized countries are also undertaking fiscal policy contraction.

Also, the pre-eminent reserve currency status of the dollar means that it rises and falls in response to world events outside our control — and at present political and economic instabilities elsewhere seem likely to keep the dollar relatively strong.

The available evidence, including international experience, suggests it is very unlikely that the United States could experience an “expansionary fiscal contraction” as a result of short-term cuts in discretionary domestic federal government spending.

The best way to bring the debt-to-G.D.P. ratio under control is to limit future spending increases and augment revenue while the economy continues to recover. In particular, health care spending needs to be credibly constrained but doing this properly would mean limiting health care costs as a percentage of G.D.P. — proposals that just push costs from government onto companies and individuals are not appealing.

There is also a pressing need for tax reform — to reduce complexity, lower distortions and, in particular, roll back the subsidies for household and corporate debt that have crept into the system. Excessive private sector debts pose a significant systemic and fiscal risk to the economy. The major reason government debt surged relative to G.D.P. in the last three years is the deep recession — the result of a financial crisis brought on by the irresponsible buildup of private debt.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=4526094a945f8b616caf77a2df421dca

Economix: Uneven Prospects for the Arab World

A May Day protest in Cairo on Sunday.Khalil Hamra/Associated PressA May Day protest in Cairo on Sunday.

The popular uprisings across the Arab world are defining a new order in the region. But as the transition continues, the area’s economies are diverging sharply, posing added challenges to leaders as they seek to cultivate greater stability.

A new report on Tuesday by the Institute of International Finance, whose members include the world’s largest commercial and investment banks, shows the magnitude of what lies ahead.

As the upheavals add to a jump in the price of oil, oil-producing Arab countries — including Iraq — are expected to experience double-digit growth this year, feeding an already significant fiscal surplus.

Economic growth among Gulf oil exporters is expected to expand by an average of more than 5 percent, elevated by higher oil production and a surge in government spending.

It’s little surprise, then, that countries that must import oil from their neighbors are faring worse. The study shows that Egypt, Tunisia and Syria in particular are all looking at deep contractions this year before returning to growth in 2012, assuming any new demonstrations do not lead to a downward spiral.

DESCRIPTIONInstitute of International Finance e = IIF estimate; f = IIF forecast. * Absence of projections for Libya due to lack of political certainty. ** Egypt growth rates have been adjusted to a calendar year basis to make them consistent with other countries, while figures for inflation and the fiscal and current accounts are on a fiscal year basis.

As leaders increase food and fuel subsidies, raise wages and pensions and try to expand public-sector employment, the fiscal deficits of these countries are expected to widen sharply. While the moves are aimed at anchoring social stability, the report says they will most likely mean a postponement of badly needed fiscal changes that would help restore financial stability and ward off the threat of further downgrades by ratings agencies.

Even if governments can make progress there, the separate scourge of inflation is proving harder to combat across the region. Surging costs for oil and food, together with sharp increases in government spending, mean that already high prices will keep soaring.

Consumer price inflation among oil importers is expected to rise to an average of 8.1 percent next year from 7.2 percent this year, with inflation in Egypt stuck around 11 percent, and doubling in countries like Morocco and Syria. The report shows that the figure is lower in oil-exporting countries, but the average is expected to rise sharply in 2011.

DESCRIPTIONInstitute of International Finance

Meanwhile, unemployment — one of the biggest sources of discontent — is expected to remain stubbornly high. The Arab world continues to suffer from the highest unemployment rates of any developing region, especially for young people and women. In 2009, the latest figures the institute had available, unemployment in these countries averaged 11.5 percent over all, and 25.2 percent among the young. Among oil importers, the averages were 11.1 percent and 26.5 percent, respectively.

Meeting the employment challenge, the report concludes, will require a major transformation of the region’s societies and economic structures.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=6381f57cbfd3d968adbdec655d8fc876