The high-stakes debt ceiling fight could be a $12 trillion blow to the American economy: Here are 3 disasters a default would trigger
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You've probably been hearing about the massive problem of the national debt for years. If you're Gen Z, it's been an issue your entire conscious life. Since 2000, the debt has grown from $5.6 trillion to over $31.38 trillion—a whopping 460% increase—while threatening to let the nation default has become a hot button issue. (The oldest members of Gen Z were born in 1997, so they've lived with financial doomsday warnings about the debt since they were 3 years old.) Threats in Congress to refuse to raise the debt ceiling have also grown in frequency over the last 20 years, usually as Republicans, the party traditionally associated with debt reduction (despite Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump both significantly growing the deficit), hammer on the need to cut spending while a Democrat is in office.

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Still, despite a few close calls, the U.S. has never defaulted on its debt obligations. But the tug-of-war is playing out again today, as Republican Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy has refused to pass what Democratic President Joe Biden calls a "clean" debt ceiling bill (i.e., with no spending cuts attached).

The debt ceiling is the legal limit on the total amount of debt the federal government can borrow to finance its spending. It's not even a very old part of American history: It was enacted in another economic era, in 1917, as Congress ironically sought to streamline the fundraising process along with entry into World War I. The federal government technically hit the debt ceiling on January 19 of this year—the 79th time since 1960, according to the Treasury Department. As it has multiple times before, Treasury has been using what it calls "extraordinary measures" to keep paying America's bills. But now, the so-called "X-date," by which the government will not be able to fulfill all of its obligations even with these financial maneuvers is rapidly approaching, with Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen estimating the country could hit it as early as June 1.

Presidents in both Democratic and Republican administrations have raised the ceiling over 100 times since World War II, according to the Congressional Research Service. Though there have been many publicly partisan fights over it—perhaps most noticeably in 2011 and 2013—the parties have always reached some sort of agreement.