Updated October 3, 2013
Now that we're stuck in the middle of yet another debt impasse, its time to review a study released by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) entitled "Debt Limit - Analysis of 2011 - 2012 Actions Taken and Effect of Delayed Increase on Borrowing Costs". This study takes an interesting look at how much the debt ceiling machinations of August 2011 actually cost American taxpayers through the impact on the Treasury's borrowing costs.
Now that we're stuck in the middle of yet another debt impasse, its time to review a study released by the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) entitled "Debt Limit - Analysis of 2011 - 2012 Actions Taken and Effect of Delayed Increase on Borrowing Costs". This study takes an interesting look at how much the debt ceiling machinations of August 2011 actually cost American taxpayers through the impact on the Treasury's borrowing costs.
The
delays in raising the debt limit in August 2011 and again in January 2012 made
it difficult for the U.S. Treasury to manage its burgeoning debt load which,
effective July 20th, has reached:
In
case you've forgotten, the Budget Control Act of 2011 resulted in a three phase
increase in the debt ceiling; on August 2, 2011 ($400 billion increase), after
the markets closed on September 21, 2011 ($500 billion increase) and again
after the market close on January 27, 2012 ($1,200 billion increase). These
actions raised the debt limit to its current level of $16.394 trillion.
Here
is a graph showing the rise in the debt limit since 1996:
Largely
because of the childish behaviour of Congress last year, the U.S. Treasury found
itself in a situation where it had to take extraordinary actions to avoid
exceeding the debt limit. Here is a chart showing what measures the U.S.
Treasury can take when delays in raising the debt limit occur, most of which
were used during the “crisis”:
Basically,
the Treasury is forced to creatively "juggle" accounting items from
one government account to another to prevent pushing the debt beyond its
mandated ceiling.
While
all of this fun and games was entertaining, particularly to those living inside
the Beltway, delays in raising the debt limit created uncertainty in the
Treasury market, resulting in an increased "risk premium" since, in
bond market transactions, as prices drop, yields rise. The GAO's analysis
suggests that the delays in raising the debt limit in 2011 resulted in
increased borrowing costs on certain securities. This increased cost is
measured using a multivariate regression analysis of the spread between the
yields on private securities (i.e. corporate bond yields which are deemed more
risky) and the yields on Treasuries over the period of time between the debt
limit event timeframe and the previous three months. A decrease in the
spread indicates that the market perceives the risk of Treasuries to be closer
to that of the more risky private securities, resulting in an increasing cost
to the Treasury and, most importantly, to American taxpayers. Here is a
graph showing the result of the GAO's analysis:
Notice that the spread on 5 year Treasuries decreased by 0.33 percentage points, a rather large risk premium. The
GAO analysis shows that there was a premium on Treasuries with a maturity
longer than two years. Applying that to all of the debt issued by the
Treasury during the 2011 debt ceiling stalemate results in an increase in
borrowing costs of $1.3 billion for fiscal 2011 alone. Since many of the
Treasury instruments issued during that time have multi-year maturities (ranging from 2 to 30 years), the
increase in borrowing costs arising from the Congressional boondoggle will far
exceed the $1.3 billion mark and will be with American taxpayers for decades to
come.
On
top of that, during the stalemate, the actions taken by the Treasury Department
to creatively manage the debt resulted in the accrual of an estimated 5750
hours of additional work, including overtime, which also comes at a cost to
taxpayers.
While last year's debt ceiling tussle looked like partisan game-playing
from the viewpoint of the Democrats and Republicans residing in Congress, as
our mothers were fond of saying, someone's going to get hurt and it's going to
end in tears. Sadly, it's taxpayers that are the ones who are crying.
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