The Treasury Department has started drawing from the civil service pension fund to avoid hitting the $8.2 trillion national debt limit. The move to tap the pension fund follows last month’s decision to suspend investments in a retirement savings plan held by government employees. In a letter to Congress this week, Treasury Secretary John W. Snow said he would rely on the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund to avoid bumping up against the statutory debt limit. He said the Treasury is suspending investments and will redeem a portion of the money credited to the fund. Once Congress raises the debt limit, the Treasury will “restore all due interest and principal” to the pension fund as soon as possible, Snow said. He made a similar promise when the Treasury announced that reinvestment of some assets in the Thrift Savings Plan’s government securities fund, or G Fund, had been suspended. The civil service trust fund will provide the Treasury with several billion dollars for extra borrowing. The fund had an estimated balance of about $655 billion at the start of the year, but only a small portion of that is available to the Treasury because of the statutes […]
Thursday, March 9th, 2006
Retirement Fund Tapped to Avoid National Debt Limit
Author: STEPHEN BARR
Source: Washington Post
Publication Date: Wednesday, March 8, 2006; D04
Link: Retirement Fund Tapped to Avoid National Debt Limit
Source: Washington Post
Publication Date: Wednesday, March 8, 2006; D04
Link: Retirement Fund Tapped to Avoid National Debt Limit
Stephan: In the Orwellian world of Republican controlled Washington, where the words used are often antipodal to the substance of the thing itself, the issue of the debt, which is arcane and complex, is largely obscured to the point of ignorance. In the end though the numbers devour the illusion. Here is an example.