U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew warned Thursday morning of the consequences if Congress fails to increase the debt ceiling, and urged leaders to act swiftly.
“It is irresponsible and reckless to insist that we experience a forced default to learn how bad it is. If anything at all is learned from the shutdown, it will convince the deniers — or a majority who can work their will — to avoid putting the entire economy at risk in the name of an ideological fight,” Lew said during his testimony before the Senate Finance Committee.
The biggest threat to sustained growth in the economy is “self-inflicted wounds,” he said.
“Unfortunately, we now face a manufactured political crisis that is beginning to deliver an unnecessary blow to our economy — right at a time when the U.S. economy and the American people have painstakingly fought back from the worst recession since the Great Depression,” Lew said.
His comments came on day 10 of the government shutdown.
Lew reiterated that President Obama was open to a short-term deal on the debt ceiling.
“He’s not looking for a crisis,” Lew said. ”We cannot have the debt limit be something that is a threat to the economy…Give and take means everyone coming and doing hard things.”









