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Government weeks away from hitting debt ceiling, report warns

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On top of that, there’s $33 billion due on interest on the debt alone, and another $27 billion due to vendors who sell to the Defense Department. In all, the center sees monthly outflows owed at around $464 billion in February, compared with incomes revenue to the government of about $202 billion.

The Treasury Department declined to comment on the report. Spokesman Matthew Anderson pointed to an Oct. 31 estimate from the agency, which mirrored the center’s concerns without offering numbers. Treasury warned that the debt limit could “be reached near the end of 2012” and that extraordinary measures would allow the government to pay its debts “until early 2013.”

There are just four to six weeks of juggling available to the Treasury Department, versus the roughly 11 weeks the agency had last year.

“Congress has a shorter amount of time to deal with this problem than it might expect,” said Shai Akabas, a senior policy analyst at the center and co-author of the report.

At year’s end, Bush-era income tax cuts are set to expire, as are a host of other tax measures such as extended unemployment insurance benefits and a temporary payroll tax holiday. And absent a budget deal, deep across-the-board spending cuts are scheduled to take effect early next year. Congressional leaders and President Barack Obama have said they’re working on a two-step solution that addresses some of these matters in December with a mechanism to resolve the rest next year.

It leaves little room for attention to the coming debt ceiling issue.

Last year, the debt ceiling talks hurt hiring and economic growth, erasing wealth from businesses and ordinary Americans alike. The Government Accountability Office estimated that the debt-ceiling standoff cost taxpayers $1.3 billion. The center puts the costs at $19 billion over 10 years, based on changes in the cost of borrowing during the standoff period and what the changes amount to over the maturity of that debt.

Ratings agencies Moody’s Investors Service and Fitch Ratings have threatened to join S&P in downgrading U.S. debt absent resolution of the debt ceiling. If all three take away the vaunted AAA rating of government bonds, many large pension funds and endowments may be required to shed them. It would leave them only AAA-rated government bonds issued by smaller countries such as Switzerland and Norway.

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