America’s perennial debt ceiling crisis has been postponed, not averted. On Wednesday, the House is set to vote for a piece of legislation that will “suspend the debt limit” through May 18, meaning that we have until around April before Washington DC descends into yet another manufactured budget panic.
In fact, this spring’s inevitable crisis will be nothing new: It’s just the latest incarnation of a perpetual state of pseudo-emergency which stretches back to the summer of 2011. That was the season of Debt Ceiling Crisis 1.0, when the Republicans first announced that they would only allow the United States to pay its debts in exchange for future spending cuts. Disaster was (mostly) averted when Congress passed the 2011 Budget Control Act, which raised the debt ceiling while putting place a slate of automatic cuts set to kick in at the beginning of 2013, unless nullified by further legislation.
Those cuts, of course, became a major component of what was later called the “fiscal cliff,” the next stage of the perma-crisis. Savvy political heavies insisted that the looming spending cuts would be a disaster, and needed to be replaced by different—potentially harsher—spending cuts. So we got another deal to delay spending cuts by two months. Meanwhile, the federal government whooshed past the deadline for extending the debt limit on December 31, though Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner instituted a “debt issuance suspension period” which meant that the federal government would not actually exceed the limit until February 28.
Which brings us to our current state of affairs: Congress, faced with an impending debt ceiling crisis, is trying to set aside the matter until May. Soon they’ll be working to prevent automatic spending cuts as well. Any of this sound familiar?
Of course, the panic is purely man-made. If the United States eliminated its debt ceiling—a theoretically simple thing to do—then it would never again face a debt ceiling crisis. In fact, Congress could even keep the debt ceiling so long as it returned to its historical practice of raising the limit as part of an annual routine. Instead, Congress has adopted a new routine: Republicans make their demands, Democrats denounce them as hostage takers, and the two parties ink a deal to prolong the standoff for another few months.









