. Medical and Hospital News .




.
POLITICAL ECONOMY
US debt deal faces Congress gauntlet
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Aug 1, 2011

With barely a day to act, US Congress leaders raced Monday to corral enough votes to pass a massive austerity plan that would avert a disastrous, first-ever debt default with ruinous global consequences.

The Republican-led US House of Representatives seemed on track for an evening vote, followed by the Democratic-held Senate, with the fate of the legislation still in doubt just after midday despite upbeat predictions from supporters.

"I never count my votes until they are cast. So I'm hopeful, but you know, we will have to see," Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid told reporters, adding: "I'm not here to declare victory. We have to get this thing passed."

The measure, needed to ensure the world's richest economy can pay its bills past a midnight Tuesday (0400 GMT Wednesday) deadline, raises the $14.3 trillion US debt ceiling and calls for $2.1 trillion in spending cuts over 10 years.

Early optimism on global markets had evaporated by midday on worries the deal could fall short of clearing the polarized US Congress or fail to prevent a painful downgrade of Washington's sterling Triple-A debt rating.

"It is certainly not a game-changing breakthrough, and will keep the possibility of a near-term rating downgrade alive," wrote Barclays Capital analysts, who called the accord "just a band-aid approach."

A downgrade could push up US interest rates, making debt payments more expensive and affecting any flexible-rate loan in the sputtering US economy, still grappling with historically high unemployment of 9.2 percent.

Vice President Joe Biden, a 36-year veteran of the Senate, held talks on Capitol Hill to press fellow Democrats to back the deal, fruit of six months of fitful talks between President Barack Obama and his Republican foes.

Emerging from closed-door talks with House Democrats, Biden said he had gotten an earful of their "frustration" but insisted "I feel confident that this will pass."

All eyes were on the polarized House of Representatives, where liberal Democrats worried about the social safety net and archconservative "Tea Party"-allied Republicans demanded far more draconian government spending cuts.

"This deal is a sugar-coated Satan sandwich. If you lift the bun, you will not like what you see," Democratic Representative Emanuel Cleaver, who heads the Congressional Black Caucus, said on his Twitter feed.

Liberals were aghast that the plan relied on spending cuts and did not include increases in tax revenues from the rich and wealthy corporations, though Obama has called for letting tax cuts for the top brackets expire in January 2013.

Republican House Speaker John Boehner faced a critical test of his ability to rally his restive caucus, even as some Tea-Party-aligned lawmakers flatly rejected the deal.

Representative Michele Bachmann, a Tea Party favorite who is seeking the Republican presidential nomination, opposed the package saying it "spends too much and doesn't cut enough."

Piling pressure on Boehner, Democratic House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi has stayed largely neutral about the legislation.

The blueprint negotiated between Obama and congressional leaders would include more than $900 billion in cuts over the next 10 years -- $350 billion of it in defense. A special congressional committee would then be tasked with coming up with another $1.5 trillion in cuts to report by November 23.

A failure by the committee would trigger automatic cuts -- half in defense spending, a priority for many Republicans. Automatic cuts would not touch Democratic-backed Social Security and Medicare payments for the elderly, although they would still affect providers of the health care program.

White House spokesman Jay Carney rejected Democratic criticism that the package does not raise revenue, saying that the special committee could recommend measures such as cuts in oil and gas subsidies.

In a key point for Obama, the package will raise the debt ceiling into 2013 --- meaning he will not be forced into a similar showdown with Congress on spending in the midst of his re-election campaign next year.

The debt ceiling would rise by about $2.4 trillion in two steps. The US government hit its current debt limit of $14.3 trillion on May 16 and has since been operating through spending and accounting adjustments, as well as higher than expected tax revenue.

Japan, the second-largest foreign holder of US debt after China, hailed the deal. Beijing made no official comment, but its state-controlled television called the package "more pomp and ceremony than substance."

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, meanwhile, accused the United States of acting as a "parasite" on the world economy by living through debt rather than within its means.

In New York, the blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average slumped 0.34 percent at around 1915 GMT while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite was down 0.79 percent.

In Asian trade earlier Monday, Tokyo jumped 1.34 percent, Hong Kong put on 0.99 percent and Sydney advanced 1.65 percent while Shanghai gained just 0.19 percent on poor Chinese manufacturing data.

Meanwhile gold, the traditional safe haven in times of trouble, continued to hold near record levels, finishing at $1,623, down from the close Friday of $1,628.50.




Related Links
The Economy

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



POLITICAL ECONOMY
HSBC to 'announce more than 10,000 job cuts next week'
London (AFP) July 30, 2011
Global banking giant HSBC will announce next week plans to axe between 10,000 and 15,000 jobs in the coming year as part of a drastic cost-cutting drive, a report said Saturday. The bank, headquartered in London but with a major focus on Asia, will unveil the job cuts on Monday as it posts its half-year results, Britain's Sky News television reported, without citing its sources. An HSBC ... read more


POLITICAL ECONOMY
IAEA chief visits Japan's stricken nuclear plant

Japan passes second recovery budget

Tiny robots could find nuclear plant leaks

Japan eyes $291 bln for reconstruction: reports

POLITICAL ECONOMY
China launches navigation satellite: Xinhua

China to launch 9th orbiter for indigenous global navigation network

Cambridge Pixel, Navtech to work together

Second Boeing GPS IIF Satellite Sends First Signals from Space

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Cave art could be Britain's oldest

US cryonics founder dies, has body frozen

Speed limit on babies' vision

Genetic research confirms that non-Africans are part Neanderthal

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Poachers nabbed with world's rarest tortoise

UNC researchers identify seventh and eighth bases of DNA

Some Desert Birds Less Affected By Wildfires and Climate Change

The fantastic Mrs Fox knows best for urban fox families

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Swaziland AIDS activists march for drugs

'Swine flu' breath test could reduce future vaccination shortages

AIDS: Science has delivered on HIV prevention. Now what?

Reservoir dogs: Scientists aim at HIV's last holdout

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Hundreds riot in China over vendor's death

China philanthropist hires gymnast-turned-beggar

China calls Vatican excommunication threats 'rude'

Uighur leader fears for China detainees after clashes

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Denmark to hand over 24 pirates to Kenya for trial

Chinese ship released by pirates: EU

South Korea jails Somali pirates

US Navy recruits gamers to help in piracy strategy

POLITICAL ECONOMY
Chinese banks could survive '50%' property slide

Japan's quake-hit electronics firms slide into red

Chinese media attack US over debt battle

Outside View: Debt-ceiling morass


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement