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Stalled ‘beautiful’ bill drains nation’s rainy-day fund

in Business
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Illustration of a man looking at a graph showing a debt ceiling while a large pile of burning money sits in front of him.
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Congress’ dithering over President Trump’s “Big Beautiful Bill” has the potential to make life difficult in the coming months – by possibly spiking interest rates, On The Money has learned.

Most Americans don’t appreciate all the ways our elected officials have saddled them with trillions upon trillions of dollars in debt.

The national debt stands at around $36 trillion, and needs to go higher to pay for all the stuff the House didn’t cut in passing the buck to the Senate.


Until Congress crafts a budget and amends that annoying law known as the debt ceiling, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been tapping something known as the Treasury General Account.  Jack Forbes / NY Post Design

Until Congress crafts a budget and amends that annoying law known as the debt ceiling, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has been tapping something known as the Treasury General Account. 

The account, known on Wall Street bond trading desks as the “TGA,” is needed to pay short-term bills and acts like a rainy-day fund. It’s like your checking account, except hundreds of billions of dollars larger.

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However, it’s massively underfunded and in need of cash (aka more borrowing) so the government can keep the lights on – which could mean a nasty spike in interest rates sometime this summer when the selling begins since higher yields will be needed to attract more buyers, according to the smart Wall Street folks at the Bear Traps Report.

Bessent has been toying with ways to get banks to hold more treasuries as part of the capital cushion. Foreign buyers are needed but Trump’s trade war makes it difficult to get saving nations like China and Japan to once again come to our rescue.

“The longer it takes for Congress to pass the bill and raise the ceiling, the more Bessent depletes the government’s checking account, and therefore the more money he has to raise once the ceiling is lifted,” Bear Traps analyst Robbert Van Batenburg tells me. 


Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent speaking to President Trump and others in the Oval Office.
Bessent, right, has been toying with ways to get banks to hold more treasuries as part of the capital cushion. AP

“Yellen in the 2023 debt ceiling crisis drove this checking account down to less than $50 billion, forcing her to raise a whopping $800 billion in the summer of 2023.” 

To be sure, the dangerous TGA drawdown comes from overspending, but also from how spending works via the debt ceiling law. The ceiling is  supposed to apply the brakes on borrowing so future generations don’t have to pay for government largesse we consume today.

Given our addiction to big government and debt to finance it, the ceiling is a misnomer — it’s constantly flouted and amended higher, though the politics of raising it often gets messy. 

When the debt ceiling is finally raised in the coming weeks, the government might have to issue another $400 billion in additional debt just to get back to where it was at this time last year, Van Batenburg said.

Yes, that’s an extra $400 billion on top of the nearly $800 billion deficit this quarter that Bessent will cover once the budget deal is passed, the debt ceiling is lifted and the government goes back to mortgaging your kids’ future. The full yearly deficit is likely to hit $2 trillion or more.

You might be asking why we need TGA in the first place. The answer is that if we don’t fully fund the TGA, it would send a terrible message to the markets that we can’t pay for stuff. It could be interpreted as a default of sorts, which would send interest rates even higher.

Sounds like a no-win situation for the American taxpayer.

[Notigroup Newsroom in collaboration with other media outlets, with information from the following sources]

Tags: BusinessDebtDonald Trumpfederal budgeton the moneyPoliticstreasury departmentwall street
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