Yellen warns ‘extraordinary measures’ will be needed to avoid default

Janet L. Yellen, the Treasury Secretary, listens during a hearing in February on Capitol Hill in Washington. The Treasury secretary urged Congress to protect the full faith and credit of the United States by raising the debt limit. (Kenny Holston/The New York Times)

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen informed Congress on Friday that if lawmakers do not act to raise or suspend the nation’s debt limit as soon as Jan. 14, she would most likely need to begin using “extraordinary measures” to prevent the United States from defaulting on its debt.

Yellen issued her warning about the debt limit — which caps the amount of money that the United States is authorized to borrow to fund the government and meet its financial obligations — at a fractious political moment. Republicans are set to take control of Washington next month, and President-elect Donald Trump has already called on Congress to abolish the debt limit before he seeks to push through a new round of tax cuts and other spending priorities.

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The debt limit was suspended in June 2023 after a contentious negotiation over federal spending, work requirements for receiving government benefits and funding for the IRS. That suspension is scheduled to expire Thursday, forcing Treasury to begin using so-called extraordinary measures to allow the federal government to keep paying its bills.

Those measures are essentially accounting maneuvers that keep the government from breaching the debt limit. They can include suspending certain types of investments in savings plans for government workers and health plans for retired postal workers.

The United States borrows money to pay its bills and obligations, including funding for social safety net programs, interest on the national debt and salaries for members of the armed forces. If the United States is unable to raise the debt limit, it will soon be unable to make many of those payments, including to investors who have bought government debt.

“I respectfully urge Congress to act to protect the full faith and credit of the United States,” Yellen said in a letter Friday.

She explained that it was not precisely clear when she would have to begin taking steps, which usually include curbing certain government investments, to avoid a default. Because of a technical issue related to federal investments, she said, the Treasury Department expects that extraordinary measures would have to be employed sometime between Jan. 14 and Jan. 23.

As lawmakers negotiated last week over a government spending bill, Trump complicated matters by making a last-minute push for them to lift or eliminate the debt limit.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

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