Raising the debt limit just allows
the United States to pay our bills for money that Congress already spent.
Sometimes
when I get a bill I don’t feel like paying it. But I do, because I’m a
responsible adult. If I don’t pay my bills, I get in trouble. It’s true for a
family and for a government.
Republicans
in Congress are creating another manufactured default crisis. Raising the debt
limit doesn’t authorize new spending. It just allows
the United States to pay our bills for money that Congress already spent.
Refusing
to honor their commitments would mean undermining our nation’s credit rating
and stiffing Americans on money they are owed.
If Congress doesn’t pay its bills, we all pay the price: workers with retirement investments in bonds, companies that do business with the government, and families who need home and student loans.
The
United States has always honored our commitment to pay our bills. The
Republicans serving in Congress authorized this spending. They need to pay what
they owe.
Republicans
making good on their threat to default would mean defaulting on U.S. bonds (most of which are held by Americans).
The federal government would fail to pay its bills to the people and companies
that do business with the United States, like doctors who treat Medicare
beneficiaries; and this would raise the costs of consumer borrowing,
like mortgages and student loans.
We’ve
seen this movie before: Congressional right-wingers’ brinksmanship and
recklessness created the default crisis in 2011 that rattled stock markets and
hurt the economy. (Some called it the “tea party downgrade.”)
Economists
have described the GOP’s actions as “economic sabotage” that
almost derailed the recovery and did more damage to America’s credit worthiness
than the debt ever has.
Defaulting
on our bills is not the way to fix our economy. Acting irresponsibly will only
make our economy worse.
Elizabeth
Rose is the communications director for the Campaign for
America's Future, an organization that promotes progressive
policies. Distributed via OtherWords. OtherWords.org