Saturday, 19 October 2013

An Unthankful US Deal

Instead of defusing the time bomb of a historic debt default, the United States has come up with a last-gasp deal to only fund its government until Jan 15 and raise the debt ceiling until Feb 7.
This might be the best what US politicians could provide at the moment. But it is certainly not what is aspired for by millions of Americans who have suffered because of the political debacle and many foreign debt-holders who are worried about the safety of their US investment
US President Barack Obama was right to say that US leaders needed to "earn back" the trust of the American people in the aftermath of the crisis. Yet no less urgent is the task of the world's largest economy to restore its reputation as an economic safe haven.
If concerns that crisis-driven politics has become the "new normal" in Washington cannot be immediately addressed, there is little chance for the US economy to emerge out of the great financial crisis that the Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy triggered five years ago.
The Congress deal on Wednesday offers a temporary fix to pull the US economy from the brink of a catastrophic debt default that could have devastated the global economy. The deal, in all fairness, fails to address the root cause of the US' long-term fiscal troubles.
Washington's political dysfunction is the apparent reason why international investors doubt its ability to honor its signature. It is the fast-growing debt that has been eroding global confidence in the US government's capability and commitment to do so. Even its unprecedented, massive monetary stimulus program has pressed down borrowing costs for long.
The stopgap plan has also set up a forum of US politicians to negotiate a more permanent budget deal while leaving open the possibility of another bitter budget fight and another government shutdown early next year.
Source: Caijing

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