The ongoing partisan battles in Congress over a government shutdown are making daily headlines. However, whether a shutdown ultimately occurs or not may not be the most important outcome of this squabble.
Over the weekend, at the 11th hour, Congress and the White House passed a continuing resolution to postpone a government shutdown until Nov. 14, 2023. Axing funding for Ukraine was the price Republicans demanded to kick this spending can down the road. This was somehow hailed as a bipartisan victory, one of the few in this deeply divided Congress. It seems to me that the only victor in this mess was Russia.
Since then, a handful of radical right Republicans in the House, led by Matt Gaetz, a Republican congressman from Florida and the subject of an ethics probe, forced a vote to push House Speaker Kevin McCarthy out of his post. Combined with most Democrats, the House voted to oust McCarthy.
Gaetz and the radical right had accused McCarthy of breaking his word to conservatives on spending bills and how he would run his house. They pointed to McCarthy's behind-the-scenes, side deal with the Biden administration to restore funding for Ukraine as just another reason not to trust the speaker. The straw that broke the radical's back, however, was when McCarthy reached out across the aisle to come up with a compromise that would keep the government's lights on at least temporarily.
Democrats were divided on their response to the turmoil within the Republican Party. But few Democrats trusted the speaker, given his partisan track record. In the end, partisan politics dictated they voted to oust the speaker, even though it meant that no work could be done in Congress until a new speaker was elected.
If one steps back from the hour-by-hour circus in Washington and looks at this debacle from the perspective of others, the U.S. government appears to be in a precarious state. Many developed countries plan their budgets, their spending levels, the level of debt, etc. in five-to-10-year increments. Our government can't even agree on whether they will be able to pay its employees next month.
It is also becoming increasingly apparent that the U.S. government is unable to control spending on both the short-term and long-term levels. This failure to manage continues to happen under both parties. This is not just my opinion. Two of the three largest credit agencies, Fitch and Standard and Poor's, have come to the same conclusion.
Back in 2011 Standard and Poor's reduced our long-held triple-A credit rating to AA, citing a weakening in the effectiveness, stability, and predictability of American policymaking and political institutions.
This year, thanks to the debt ceiling debacle spawned by this same group of dysfunctional politicians, Fitch, another big credit rating agency, downgraded our debt as well. Fitch cited a "steady deterioration in standards of governance over the last twenty years." They went on to explain that "repeated debt limit political stand-offs and last-minute resolutions have eroded confidence in fiscal management."
And here we are again — more than two months later — repeating the same suicidal behavior. The actions among U.S. legislators befit a banana republic economy, not the U.S. Only one credit agency is left, Moody's, that still maintains a AAA rating for our sovereign debt. How long that status remains is my concern.
Politicians of both parties fail to realize (or don't care) that these rating changes have a real cost to the nation and taxpayers for decades to come. The cost of issuing U.S. debt and paying bondholders interest is climbing year after year. As it stands today, interest payments alone are costing the country 8 percent of GDP. That percentage is expected to increase exponentially. We are talking billions of dollars, readers, if not trillions, when we consider the cost that we will have to bear (as will our children and their children).
Moody's has already commented that a shutdown would have credit implications. A downgrade in their rating based on "the weakness of U.S. institutional and governance strength," as well as "the fractious bipartisan politics around a relatively disjointed and disruptive budget process" indicates to me that unless things change dramatically next week, we could see yet another downgrade.
Bill Schmick is the founding partner of Onota Partners, Inc., in the Berkshires. His forecasts and opinions are purely his own and do not necessarily represent the views of Onota Partners Inc. (OPI). None of his commentary is or should be considered investment advice. Direct your inquiries to Bill at 1-413-347-2401 or email him at bill@schmicksretiredinvestor.com.
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