Timothy Geithner – U.S. bankrupt within two months!

US bankrupt soon

U.S. goes bankrupt within two months, said U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. What he said fueled today’s concerns about the economy, saying that the U.S. could bankrupt within two months. U.S. hits the ceiling on how much you can borrow on New Year’s Eve, said Geithner who says that the U.S. can only postpone to suspend payments for a few months.

President Barack Obama

President Obama has canceled its Christmas time off in Hawaii to try to persuade Congress to reach a deal that makes it possible to avoid the so-called financial precipice with automatic cuts and tax increases.

Timothy Geithner

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Wednesday that the nation’s statutory debt limit will be reached on December 31 and the Treasury Department will take “certain extraordinary measures” to postpone the date. In a letter to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), Geithner said that the measures would add about two months — or an additional $200 billion — to the limit under normal circumstances. However, given the tax and spending uncertainty due to the so-called fiscal cliff, Geithner said, he cannot predict how much time the measures will actually allow. The debt ceiling is the legal limit for Congress to borrow money. The 2011 summer debt ceiling crisis caused Standard and Poor’s to downgrade the credit rating of the United States and contributed to economic turmoil before Congress and President Barack Obama reached a deal to raise the limit.

The letter from Geithner to Reid comes as the fiscal cliff is set to happen at the end of the year, with no apparent deal close in Congress. The cliff will bring austerity a combination of spending cuts and tax increases — which many expect to slow economic growth in the coming year. Geithner’s letter puts pressure on Congressional negotiators to reach a deal on the fiscal cliff, as a debt ceiling increase will almost certainly be on the table as Congress works to stave off the looming tax increases and spending cuts.

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