The Denver Post

When will the U.S. run out of money? It’s complicate­d

- By Alan Rappeport

In letters to Congress and warnings to business leaders about the catastroph­ic consequenc­es if the United States defaults on its debt, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen repeatedly has offered an important caveat.

She cannot give the exact date when the federal government will run out of cash.

The United States reached its statutory $31.4 trillion debt limit Jan. 19, forcing the Treasury Department — which borrows huge sums of money to pay the nation’s bills — to begin using accounting maneuvers known as extraordin­ary measures to conserve cash and avoid breaching the cap.

On Monday, Yellen reiterated warnings that the Treasury Department could deplete its cash reserves by June 1. Still, the exact day when the United States will reach the so-called X-date is nearly impossible to determine.

“These estimates are based on currently available data, and federal receipts, outlays and debt could vary from these estimates,” Yellen has told lawmakers in her letters. “The actual date Treasury exhausts extraordin­ary measures could be a number of days or weeks later than these estimates.”

Although Treasury has the most sophistica­ted cash management system in the world and employs teams of highly trained economists, its coffers are a blur of payments going out and tax revenues coming in. When its cash balance runs painfully low — as was the case Wednesday, when the Treasury General Account started the day with less than $100 billion — pinpointin­g the X-date becomes even harder to predict. In many respects, that is because the moment that a default would occur is a moving target.

Big bills are coming due.

Yellen has been eyeing early June as a pivotal month since her first warnings to Congress about the debt limit in January. The reason: The federal government spends a lot of money in a short period around June 1, and it is impossible to predict exactly how much revenue is going to be coming in and when.

In a report published Thursday, the Bipartisan Policy Center, a think tank that carefully tracks federal spending, estimated that the government will spend $101 billion on June 1. Most of that money — $47 billion — will go toward Medicare, while the rest will be directed to veterans’ benefits, military pay and retirement, civil service retirement and supplement­al security income.

On June 2, the government has to pay $25 billion in Social Security benefits and $2 billion for Medicaid

uring those two days, the government is projected to spend about $140 billion and bring in only $44 billion in tax revenue, leaving the nation’s coffers operating on fumes.

One big problem this year is that tax revenues have been coming in at a more tepid pace than anticipate­d.

Severe storms, flooding and mudslides in California, Alabama and Georgia this year prompted the Internal Revenue Service to push the April 18 tax-filing deadlines in dozens of counties to October.

Another surprising reason that cash is running lower than some budget experts projected is that the IRS is starting to operate more efficientl­y. As a result of the $80 billion that the agency received as part of the Inf lation Reduction Act last year, it has been able to ramp up hiring and chip away at the backlog of unprocesse­d tax returns.

Because the IRS has been processing returns more quickly, it is also paying out refunds more quickly and draining the amount of available cash.

If Yel len can f ind enough coins in Treasury’s couch to pay the bills until June 15, the United States could find itself with a bit of breathing room.

That is because June

15 is when third- quarter payments are due from corporatio­ns and people who are required to pay their tax bills throughout the year or choose to make payments every three months to avoid having large bills due in April.

The Congres sional Budget Office said in a report last week that an expected influx of quarterly tax receipts June 15 and the availabili­ty of additional extraordin­ary measures probably would allow the government to continue financing operations through at least the end of July.

The government could receive approximat­ely $80 billion in tax revenue that day. The Bipartisan Policy Center estimates that those funds could be sufficient to keep the federal government af loat until June 30. At that time, Yellen also would have some additional extraordin­ary measures at her disposal — a suspension of investment­s into retirement funds for federal workers — that would allow her to unlock an additional $145 billion and potentiall­y delay a default until well into July.

The lack of clarity about the X- date has made it difficult for lawmakers to know how much pressure they are under to strike a deal. The government may not know how quickly cash is running out until right before the country faces default.

But pressure is still mounting. Congress is likely to take days — if not weeks — to pass legislatio­n to raise the debt ceiling. And even if President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin Mccarthy strike an agreement, there is no guarantee that the House and Senate will pass the legislatio­n easily.

The legislativ­e calendar gets increasing­ly complicate­d as summer approaches.

Mccar thy and Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., the majority leader, would need to navigate legislatio­n reflecting that agreement through their chambers, and the days left to do so are rapidly dwindling.

The House is scheduled to be in session for only six days before the end of the month.

The Senate is set for just five and is scheduled to be out of Washington beginning on Monday before the Memorial Day weekend.

 ?? ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Steve Ricchetti, counselor to President Joe Biden, departs a meeting in Washington on June 22, 2021. President Biden selected Shalanda Young and Ricchetti to talk directly with aides to Speaker Kevin Mccarthy to avoid default.
ERIN SCHAFF — THE NEW YORK TIMES Steve Ricchetti, counselor to President Joe Biden, departs a meeting in Washington on June 22, 2021. President Biden selected Shalanda Young and Ricchetti to talk directly with aides to Speaker Kevin Mccarthy to avoid default.
 ?? HAIYUN JIANG — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., speaks with other Republican members of the House and Senate at a news conference on debt limit negotiatio­ns at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
HAIYUN JIANG — THE NEW YORK TIMES Rep. Dusty Johnson, R-S.D., speaks with other Republican members of the House and Senate at a news conference on debt limit negotiatio­ns at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday.
 ?? KENNY HOLSTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? President Joe Biden, walks to board Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Wednesday as he heads to Hiroshima, Japan, to attend the G-7 summit.
KENNY HOLSTON — THE NEW YORK TIMES President Joe Biden, walks to board Air Force One at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., Wednesday as he heads to Hiroshima, Japan, to attend the G-7 summit.

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