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Explainer | Deal or default? How America’s debt limit stand-off might end
- The United States could run out of money to pay its financial obligations as early as June 1, risking a crippling default
- Republicans have been pressing President Joe Biden to strike a deal to provide spending cuts in exchange for lifting the national borrowing limit
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Just how does the US debt limit stand-off end?
Plenty of scenarios are being publicly and privately gamed out, but no one knows for sure. The possibilities range from kumbaya to economic chaos with plenty of possibilities in between.
So far, neither President Joe Biden nor Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy is giving ground ahead of talks slated for Tuesday.
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Biden wants to increase the government’s US$31.4 trillion legal borrowing limit, so that the federal government can continue to pay its bills and the risk of a historic default goes away. McCarthy and other Republican lawmakers want a deal that guarantees trillions of dollars in spending cuts before they sign on to raising the debt limit.
Time is short: the Treasury Department warns the US could default as soon as June 1 if there is no deal.
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A look at potential outcomes:
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