December deadline won’t mark end of debt fight


December 23, 2011, is the legal deadline for Congress to approve at least $1.2 trillion in savings over 10 years to avoid an equal amount of across-the-board spending cuts, as part of a deal reached during debt talks in August.But a series of even more important events will dovetail following the November 2012 presidential election to create what some are calling a “perfect storm” for the nation’s economic affairs.”A whole lot of things happen in late 2012 and early 2013,” said James Horney, a fiscal policy expert with the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.Looming at the top of the list is the scheduled expiration of sweeping Bush-era tax cuts that in 2001 and 2003 lowered taxes across the board. President Barack Obama has called for extending these cuts for families earning less than $250,000 while letting those for the wealthiest lapse.Also by the end of 2012, Congress will have to decide on fixing a glitch in the Alternative Minimum Tax so that middle-class Americans are not forced to pay a tax that originally was aimed only at the wealthiest.Taken together, the future of these two tax policies could make for a multi-trillion-dollar swing for the Treasury, either in the way of higher revenues or more rapidly escalating debt.”The real end game is December 2012,” said Richard Gold, a lobbyist at Holland and Knight. “If the Republicans want to keep some or all of the (Bush) tax cuts, they need to cut a deal on deficits. The Bush tax cuts are the real trigger, and that gives Democrats the leverage here.”But that’s not all.By the end of 2012, Congress and Obama likely will need to increase the government’s borrowing authority. A battle over the U.S. credit limit nearly led to a government default on its debt in August. Republicans used the debt limit increase as leverage to win $917 billion in spending cuts over 10 years.The November 6, 2012, elections, when the United States will elect a president, all members of the House of Representatives and one-third of the Senate, are a big wild card, with the outcome likely to influence the outgoing Congress. It will sit until the new Congress is sworn in the following January.”At that point,” said Horney, the United States might “be in a better situation (than this year) to get some kind of an agreement” on fiscal matters.DON’T IGNORE THE SUPER COMMITTEEThe deficit-reduction “super committee” of Congress is now struggling to find just the right balance of spending cuts and tax increases to achieve $1.2 trillion in savings.Super committee member Chris Van Hollen, a House Democrat, Friday warned it was “still unclear” whether it will succeed. There are broad implications because of the November 23 deadline for presenting a plan to the full Congress.House of Representatives Majority Leader Eric Cantor said in an interview on the “Fox News Sunday” program that he was confident there would be a deal by the November 23 deadline.Success will show global financial markets that Washington is getting serious about reining in annual budget deficits that have been well over $1 trillion for three consecutive years.Failure could spark another downgrade in the government’s credit rating and rock global financial markets. In August, amid all the debt limit bickering, Standard and Poor’s knocked Treasury’s coveted AAA rating down one notch.If the super committee cannot agree to at least $1.2 trillion in savings, that amount of spending cuts would automatically go into effect in January, 2013.Gold noted that if there are automatic spending cuts, they “don’t take effect until 2013, so Congress has the time to come up with a different solution. I think that’s what everyone thinks is going to happen.”Super committee Republican member Senator Jon Kyl has said he would work to rescind automatic defense-related spending cuts if they are triggered. Half of any automatic cuts triggered would target defense programs.Senator John Kerry, a Democratic member of the super committee, was asked by Reuters whether he feared Congress, following the 2012 elections, could scrap any 2013 spending cuts before they kick in or rewrite a deficit-reduction plan agreed to by the panel.”Right now, I’m just concerned about doing our job; getting it done — one step at a time,” Kerry responded.

@7 months ago with 72 notes
#December #deadline #wont #mark #end #of #debt #fight 

Tunisia police tear gas Islamists protesting “blasphemous” film and niqab ban


(Protesters run for cover during riots in front of the main university campus in Tunis October 9, 2011/Zoubeir Souissi)

@7 months ago with 24 notes
#Tunisia #police #tear #gas #Islamists #protesting #“blasphemous” #film #and #niqab #ban 

UPDATE 1-China yuan bill risks trade war -US House speaker


* China denounces protectionist moveWASHINGTON, Oct 11 (Reuters) - Legislation designed to press China to let its currency rise in value poses a “very severe risk” of a trade war and should not be taken up by the U.S. Congress, House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said on Wednesday, a day after the bill passed the Senate.Boehner, the top Republican in Congress, has consistently voiced opposition to the measure, which would allow the U.S. government to slap countervailing duties on products from countries found to be subsidizing their exports by undervaluing their currencies.”I think, given the volatility in the world markets, given the uncertainty about the world economy, for the Congress of the United States to be taking this step at this moment in time poses a very severe risk of a trade war and unintended consequences that could come as a result,” he told reporters.”I understand that people are concerned about the value of China’s currency. I’m concerned about it as well,” said Boehner.”What I don’t believe is appropriate is for the Congress of the United States to take this issue up and to do it within a legislative form,” he added.Following a week of debate, the Democratic Party-controlled Senate approved the bill in a 63-35 vote on Tuesday and sent it to House of Representatives, where the traditionally pro-free-trade Republicans hold a majority.Boehner’s opposition could kill the bill before any House debate, but supporters are trying to rally colleagues behind a legislative tactic that would force him to bring up the legislation.Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Ma Zhaoxu on Wednesday called the bill a protectionist step that “gravely violates World Trade Organization rules.”“China urges the U.S. government, Congress and all quarters to resolutely oppose using domestic legislation to create a fuss about and put pressure on the renminbi exchange rate,” said Ma in comments on the ministry’s website (www.mfa.gov.cn).Chinese officials and media have warned that the legislation could trigger a “trade war” of escalating protectionist tit-for-tat retaliation.Mostly Democratic supporters of the bill, alarmed at high unemployment a year before congressional and presidential elections expected to focus on the economy, say China’s yuan policy already amounts to a trade war that has decimated the U.S. industrial base with artificially cheap products.Charles Schumer, the No. 3 Democrat in the Senate and a longtime critic of China’s yuan policy, predicted that the House would pass some form of China currency legislation due to pressure from rank-and-file Republican members.”I think there’s going to be huge pressure in the House by House Republicans, many of whom are from the Middle West and the South, to do something on China currency other than do nothing,” said Schumer.A second Republican leader, chairman Dave Camp of the House Ways and Means Committee, said he would hold a hearing on currency, intellectual property rights and other trade issues with China this month.”We have a complex relationship with China, an important relationship with China,” Camp said.Many U.S. economists say China holds down the value of its yuan to give its exporters an edge in global markets. China says it is committed to gradual currency reform and notes that the yuan has risen 30 percent against the dollar since 2005.

@7 months ago with 44 notes
#UPDATE #1China #yuan #bill #risks #trade #war #US #House #speaker 

Tunisia police tear gas Islamists protesting “blasphemous” film and niqab ban


(Protesters run for cover during riots in front of the main university campus in Tunis October 9, 2011/Zoubeir Souissi)

@7 months ago
#Tunisia #police #tear #gas #Islamists #protesting #“blasphemous” #film #and #niqab #ban