Euros & Dollars: More Experts Worry About U.S. Debt
More and more finance experts express worry about the U.S. government’s debt. Only Congress can prevent a fiscal crisis, but time is running out—fast.
More and more finance experts express worry about the U.S. government’s debt. Only Congress can prevent a fiscal crisis, but time is running out—fast.
Rather than reflecting the way ordinary Spaniards speak, the institution’s regulations have been rewritten to awkwardly avoid masculine nouns.
Anyone proposing more U.S. defense spending with borrowed money should consider what happens when increasingly uneasy investors have had enough of U.S. debt.
Republicans insist that the domestic crisis is more important than funding Ukraine.
The U.S. government now borrows 35 cents of every dollar it spends. Congress, meanwhile, is busy trying to keep the offices of the federal government open.
The U.S. Congress must make a choice—and make it now. Do they want to play fiscal defense and let the debt grow? Or do they want to play fiscal offense and solve the problem for good?
The growth in debt will only stop when the U.S. government is struck by a real fiscal crisis. Nothing else will work.
Deputies wrestle with controversial law endangering democracy.
When it comes to UFO disclosure, the biggest worry is not the general public. They are resilient and will take transformative news with strides. Congress is a bigger problem.
The vote came after Tlaib used the phrase “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” in a video message.