U.S. shutdown could shake global economy

The morning sun on the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Sept. 30, 2013, as government teeters on the brink of a partial shutdown.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- The U.S. is facing up to yet another battle over its public funding and debt
- Iwan Morgan says this is nothing new -- but its impact on international markets is a worry
- Money markets will get nervous at the continued dysfunction in U.S. politics
- The eurozone is only just emerging from recession and certainty is needed
World leaders might avoid
the blunt description used by Cable but their thoughts are probably
very similar. The U.S. is, once again, having another political gunfight over public funding and debt issues.

Professor Iwan Morgan
Internationally,
America's fiscal shenanigans could be particularly harmful for eurozone
countries trying to get their own public debt problems under control and
strengthen their economic recovery.
Instability in the world money markets is the last thing that the likes of Greece,
Ireland, Spain and even France need. And with the UK economy
excessively dependent on its financial sector, the storms in Washington
could turn into a tempest for the City of London.
If the U.S. imbroglio
results in a debt default next month, it will serve as a very bad
example to eurozone countries undergoing austerity to remedy their
indebtedness.
One political consequence
of this may be the growth of nationalist/populist parties in Europe who
seize on America's conduct to legitimize calls for default on their own
countries' public debts.
Nothing new

There is nothing new in
the standoff between the Republican House and the Democratic Senate over
agreeing a budget to fund government operations for the 2014 fiscal
year, beginning October 1.

Whether single party
controlled or not, Congress has failed to pass a budget by the start of
the new fiscal year annually since 1994. However, it has always approved
a Continuing Resolution to fund government operations until a budget is
agreed.

If this is not settled
by midnight today, the U.S. government will experience a partial
shutdown that will hit "non-essential services" (including federal
payment of government contracts, social security benefits and the like).
There have been ten such
shutdowns since 1981. All but one of these only lasted a weekend when
most government offices were closed anyway. The exception, in late
1995-early 1996, went on for 26 days.
We may be re-entering
the same territory because Republican insistence on defunding Obamacare
as part of any budget deal is staunchly opposed by the Democrats,
reinforced by the threat of a presidential veto if any such measure were
enacted.
This may look like a local infighting but the possible consequences could be global in scope
Iwan Morgan
Iwan Morgan
All this may look like a
local infighting but the possible consequences could be global in scope
if the stand-off continues until mid-October, when the U.S. is
scheduled to raise its debt limit.
The ceiling for
borrowing was actually reached last May. The U.S. Treasury has been
shuffling money from government accounts to pay America's creditors ever
since, but the pot is now close to empty.
The U.S. is looking down
the barrel at the first default in its history. If this happens, the
very least of the consequences will be a reduction of its credit rating
by Standard & Poor's ratings agency, along with others.
The fact that U.S.
government creditors are mainly foreign governments and central banks
may prevent panic on the money markets, but there will still be serious
repercussions and dislocations stretching throughout Asia, Europe, and
Latin America.
Global money flows

Even with a brief
default, the U.S. government will probably find it more difficult
thereafter to sell short-term Treasury notes at low interest to fund its
operations.

The likely consequence
of this would be greater reliance on medium- term and long-term
borrowing that could require higher interest rates to be attractive.
At a time when the Fed
is still operating an easy money policy to boost recovery from the Great
Recession, it may have to raise interest rates contrary to its
expansionary preferences, with harmful consequences for the American and
global economies.
If U.S. interests rate
interest rates go up, America could become a magnet for global capital,
leaving the European countries, in particular, short of credit needed to
sustain their own economic recovery.
What the world needs now is more certainty from its largest borrower
Iwan Morgan
Iwan Morgan
The more likely scenario
is that a default will be avoided, but the fear that one was imminent
and the worry that it could easily happen again this time next year is
bound to make the money markets nervous.
Foreign creditors
willingly lend to the U.S. because it is a safe bet in an uncertain
world. But if its dysfunctional politics makes it look unsafe, they may
look elsewhere.
The U.S. is fortunate
that the euro is not a reserve currency in waiting, as it looked a
decade ago, and the Chinese renminbi is nowhere near ready to challenge
the dollar.
But what the world needs now is more certainty from its largest borrower and owner of its reserve currency.
Without this, there could be very damaging repercussions for global economic growth.
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