Site icon Money & Markets, LLC

Warning Sirens Blare: Shutdown Becoming Catastrophic for US Economy

shutdown economy

The ongoing government shutdown entered its 26th day Wednesday and while most economists agree the shutdown will hurt U.S. economic growth, the doomsday chorus is growing louder by the day.

The shutdown over President Donald Trump’s long-promised border wall is the longest shutdown ever for the U.S. government, and there appears to be no end in sight. Trump wants $5.7 billion allocated for a border wall between the U.S. and Mexico in the government’s latest spending bill. But Democrats, now in control of the House of Representatives, aren’t budging.

It’s a game of chicken that could have long-lasting effects and could even push us into a recession much sooner than previous projections.

And according to economists, the effects of 800,000 federal workers and millions of government contractors working without pay or not working at all is starting to negatively affect the economy, and it’s only going to get worse.

The ongoing trade war with China also is a looming storm cloud, and there is another fight coming down the pike in March over the debt ceiling.

Here is a brief roundup of what the experts are saying, per Business Insider:

There are a variety of reasons for the shutdown slowdown. For instance, figures from 2013 suggest federal workers spent 10-15% less during the time they went unpaid, reducing consumer spending.

The shutdown also exacerbates worries about the future, potentially more economically damaging, fights in Congress. The most pressing of which is the need to raise the debt ceiling in the coming months.

As it stands the debt ceiling, or the statutory limit on the amount of debt the federal government can hold, kicks back in on March 1. While the US Treasury can maintain funding through special measures, the ceiling will still need to be lifted by Congress sometime over the summer.

Some analysts believe that the historic dysfunction over the shutdown sets a nasty precedent for the debt ceiling fight. Without an increase in the ceiling the US could default on some of its debt, an unprecedented move that would send shockwaves throughout the global economy.

“Normally, the debt ceiling ends up being lifted, but with deadlock in Congress” there’s added risk, said Neil MacKinnon, Global Macro Strategist at VTB Capital.

[totalpoll id=”8063″]