
Audio By Carbonatix
The International Monetary Fund warned Thursday May 11, 2023 of severe consequences if the US defaults on its debt, ahead of a rapidly-approaching deadline for the country to raise or suspend its borrowing limit.
"Our assessment is that there would be very serious repercussions not only for the US but also for the global economy should there be a US debt default," IMF communications director Julie Kozack told reporters, encouraging all parties to urgently resolve the matter.
Republicans and Democrats remain sharply divided over the debt ceiling, with Republicans in Congress insisting that President Joe Biden's administration agree to significant budget cuts in exchange for support to lift the limit before the country runs out of money to pay its existing bills.
Democrats have been calling for a "clean" increase of the borrowing limit, accusing Republicans of using extreme tactics to try and push their political agenda ahead of the so-called "X-date" - the point at which the US will be unable to meet its financial obligations.
The IMF warned Thursday May 11, 2023, of the potential for higher borrowing costs, broader global instability and economic repercussions in the event of a US default.
"We have seen a world in the last few years that has been affected by many shocks, so we would want to avoid those severe repercussions," Kozack said.
The lifting of the debt ceiling has historically been seen as a routine affair, given that it involves raising money to pay for spending commitments already made by Congress.
When Republicans won a narrow majority in the House of Representatives during last year's midterm elections, the right wing of the caucus insisted incoming speaker Kevin McCarthy tackle the ballooning US debt in exchange for their support.
But with the Biden administration refusing to negotiate on the debt ceiling, a standoff has arisen just weeks before the US risks running out of money to pay its obligations.
President Biden met with McCarthy earlier this week in a failed attempt to find common ground on the issue.
"Default is not an option," Biden said after the talks had concluded, while McCarthy told reporters he "didn't see any new movement" in the meeting, which was also attended by the Senate majority and minority leaders and the minority leader of the House.
The talks will resume on Friday as both sides look to resolve the issue before the X-date, which the US Treasury recently warned could come as soon as June 1, 2023.
Latest Stories
-
Bear with us over temporary outages as ECG begins transformer upgrade programme – Energy Ministry
7 minutes -
President Mahama has not broken promise on anti-LGBTQ bill — Akwatia MP
39 minutes -
Education Minister promises swift fix to Aburi Girls’ SHS water crisis
46 minutes -
Top Australian soldier charged with war crimes to remain in jail on remand
1 hour -
US journalist Shelly Kittleson released after kidnap in Iraq, officials say
1 hour -
Starmer to visit Middle East after US and Iran reach ceasefire deal
1 hour -
Telcos and regulators are failing Ghana on Mobile Money fraud
2 hours -
Discussions on petroleum taxes review ongoing with Finance Minister – Jinapor
2 hours -
BMW Club Ghana partners National Road Safety Commission for “Stay Alive” Easter road safety campaign
2 hours -
Health Ministry launches World Health Day 2026, urges science-based action
2 hours -
MMFL anchors MTN Group’s fintech push in Ghana
2 hours -
Ghana’s economy shows recovery signs, but risks persist – S&P maintains stable outlook
2 hours -
SWAG commemorates its 8th anniversary with a public lecture
2 hours -
Bekwai MP supports community projects with over 400 bags of cement, streetlights and cash during Easter
2 hours -
Ibrahim Mahama claims Police Commander failed to stop alleged assault
3 hours