Here’s How Much the Imminent Government Shutdown Will Cost You

From Peter Reagan at Birch Gold Group

Here’s something you don’t want to hear from your political leaders, especially in the federal government:

“Our financial ship is sinking.”

Yet that’s exactly how Tennessee Representative Tim Burchett recently described the situation.

He made this statement because the U.S. government can’t reach a resolution that would keep its own operations funded.

They need to do that by month-end:

Current spending laws are due to expire on Sept. 30. That means if Congress does not reach an agreement before 12:01 a.m. on Oct. 1, the government will shut down. House Republicans on Thursday sent the chamber into recess, delaying further developments in the negotiations.

We’re just a few days away from the deadline now.

Unfortunately, this is increasingly becoming business-as-usual in Washington… Shutdowns have happened at least 11 times since 1980, with the longest one lasting 34 days back in 2018.

This time, the stakes are either higher than ever, or absurdly small, depending on your perspective. The current debate is focused on $120 billion in discretionary spending. That’s 7.5% of the total discretionary spending budget – but less than 2% of the total federal budget which includes mandatory spending on programs like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and so on.

We simply don’t know yet whether we’ll see another shutdown, or how long it will last. However, we can assess the economic consequences of a government shutdown.

How much does it cost to save $120 billion?

Economic impact of a federal government shutdown (by the numbers)

We’ll start with some potential economic consequences of a shutdown, even if it only lasts a short time:

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce warned, “A well-functioning economy requires a functioning government.”

Goldman Sachs has estimated that a shutdown would reduce economic growth by 0.2% every week it lasted.

Millions of federal workers face delayed paychecks when the government shuts down, including many of the roughly 2 million military personnel and more than 2 million civilian workers across the nation.

The travel sector could lose $140 million daily in a shutdown

That’s right – there are measurable costs to individuals (federal employees and active-duty military personnel). And to individual economic sectors, like travel.

And to overall economic growth! Roughly $54 billion per week, based on Goldman Sachs’s estimate. Keep in mind that lost economic growth also results in lower tax receipts for the federal government.

Thankfully, the article continued with a bit of good news: “Social Security checks, for example, will still go out.” Thank goodness for that.

But if the shutdown were prolonged for more than a few weeks, a Guardian piece highlighted some further risks of a longer shutdown:

Other government workers who perform what are judged essential services, such as air traffic controllers and law enforcement officials, continue to work but do not get paid until Congress acts to end the shutdown.

Passport processing can stop, as can research – at national health institutes.

The Biden administration has warned that federal inspections ensuring food safety and prevention of the release of dangerous materials into drinking water could stop for the duration of the shutdown.

Nothing tells your employees you really care about them like forcing them to work without pay for an unspecified period!

As usual, shutdowns have an outsized impact on the less fortunate, in this case food benefits could also end up suffering:

The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, or SNAP, which provides food benefits to millions of low-income families, would continue throughout the month of October, he said. But if the shutdown drags on longer than October, SNAP funding would be put at risk.

During the last government shutdown four years ago, the government nearly ran out of SNAP funding that would’ve affected some 40 million Americans.

The biggest consequence of a government shutdown is a lot more difficult to measure.

Let me repeat something we quoted above:

“A well-functioning economy requires a functioning government.”

If I saw a headline about a government shutdown sparked by an attempt to cut overall spending by less than 2%, I’d laugh. Sure, you might expect to see stories about that level of dysfunction from places like Argentina or Lebanon.

But the U.S.? Really?

This simply doesn’t seem to be that difficult a problem! If I challenged you to cut your personal expenditures by 2%, could you do it?

Of course you could! Even though your personal spending (like the federal government’s) mostly goes toward “mandatory” non-negotiable categories like housing, food and transportation.

The inability to agree on even an extremely modest cut in spending has brought our government to its knees.

And, as you’d expect, the world has taken notice. In fact, Moody’s just warned the U.S. could suffer yet another downgrade in its credit rating:

A shutdown would be “credit negative for the US sovereign”…

Moody’s said it would “underscore the weakness” of U.S. institutional and governance strength compared to countries with similar credit ratings.

“In particular, it would demonstrate the significant constraints that intensifying political polarization puts on fiscal policy making at a time of declining fiscal strength,” Moody’s report reads.

Gridlock plus declining fiscal strength do not sound like the characteristics of a good borrower, do they?

And to make matters worse, the federal government is still going to the rest of the world with its hand out, asking for more loans.

Eventually, the federal government will work this out. One side will capitulate because that’s what always happens – and the spending will continue. Whether the total budget ends up at $6.9 trillion or $6.78 trillion, the national debt will grow more than $1 trillion.

That’s on top of the $33 trillion the federal government has already borrowed!

Is there a plan to pay it back?

No, there is not.

Where’s all the new money going to come from? Who in their right minds would throw good money after bad?

How much longer can the federal government rely on the rest of the world’s goodwill to finance $1 trillion a year deficits?

(Are you starting to see why the BRICS de-dollarization program might be motivated more by economics than by politics?)

I simply don’t know how much longer the federal government will be able to keep writing IOUs with a straight face. I don’t know how much longer anyone will be willing to accept them. My colleague Phillip Patrick wrote about this very issue earlier this week.

Congress may or may not get their act together over the next few days. They may or may not manage to shave less than 2% from overall government spending.

Either way, there’s still a $1.6 trillion dollar hole in the 2023 budget.

There are undoubtedly direct economic impacts from a government shutdown, like I described earlier. There are much worse economic consequences from multi-trillion-dollar deficits!

A shutdown damages confidence in government, granted. A budget that relies on unlimited borrowing for the next decade, I would argue, damages confidence a whole lot more.

There are some assets you can still trust

While it’s difficult to place any trust in a dysfunctional government, there are a few assets that have historically been relied on as safe havens. Especially physical gold and silver.

Think about it: Physical precious metals are just about the only financial asset without counterparty risk. (That means they aren’t IOUs or promises to pay.) We explain this concept in greater detail here.

Cash is another time-honored safe haven asset for uncertain economic times. Just keep in mind that, as faith in the U.S. government’s intention or ability to make good on its debts declines, the dollar’s value generally follows. Gold, on the other hand, tends to rise in price as the dollar’s value declines.

If you want to learn more, we’ve developed a free kit, packed with everything you need to know. Once you truly understand the challenges we face, I trust you’ll make the best decision for your own financial future.

The people in Washington are destroying your retirement account! Slowly but surely, the value of your 401(k) or IRA is being eaten away thanks to out-of-control inflation. And our elected officials in D.C. don’t care! In fact, they seem to be accelerating this trend with new legislation to print trillions of new dollars. And this is why I recommend Gold IRAs. To see how they work, Get this FREE info kit from Birch Gold Group about Gold IRAs. (Comes with NO obligation or strings attached.)

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
23 Comments
bidenTouchesKids
bidenTouchesKids
September 30, 2023 10:36 am

We’re only safe when the government is shut down, so I say stay shut down forever.

few assets that have historically been relied on as safe havens. Especially physical gold and silver.

Of course, every one of these stories has to end with a commercial.

anon a moos
anon a moos
  bidenTouchesKids
September 30, 2023 11:00 am

If you want to learn more, we’ve developed a free kit, packed with everything you need to know.

While the PM’s are the correct strategy its the commercial that annoys me too. Get the free kit, and later the paid subscription where we reveal the 3 secrets to financial utopia. You can buy our books to help you along the way too.

B_MC
B_MC
September 30, 2023 10:49 am

Meanwhile, in Russia….

Russia raises military budget for 2024 by 70%

I set out the key drivers for the increased spending. One is the latest Russian assumptions on when the war in Ukraine will end, on how it may escalate into a general Russia-NATO war as the Biden administration resists admitting defeat in Ukraine, which is possibly imminent, by expanding the conflict and introducing NATO forces on the ground. The second is the expenses related to the near doubling of the size of the Russian army now underway following the induction of 300,000 men one year ago by mobilization of reserves and the sign-up of more than 400,000 volunteers that we have seen since the start of this year.

Russia raises military budget for 2024 by 70%: what does this mean?

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 30, 2023 11:09 am

Propaganda media omits this fact.

J.D. Vance
@JDVance1
Last night Democrats blocked a clean, two week government funding bill because it had no money for Ukraine.

The Dems are about to shut down the government over Ukraine. I actually can’t believe it, but here we are.

zappalives
zappalives
  Anonymous
September 30, 2023 12:33 pm

All democrats love killing children……….why is that so hard to believe ?

The Duke of New York
The Duke of New York
  zappalives
September 30, 2023 12:51 pm

they also love grift, and Ukraine is like a free ATM for them, they won’t just give that up

…the bodies are just a bonus

Texican
Texican
September 30, 2023 11:19 am

What a load of horseshit. It’s all political what they decide they are going to not fund (and I’m talking about the executive branch, not the legislative). Funny how it won’t shut down all the shit that really matters, like the forever wars, the US Congress, all manner of welfare programs, the White House staff, the EPA, the IRS and so on. The power of the purse is what the House has and they should fucking use it. No shame in that, and who gives a fuck about how the corrupt media portrays it. Use that power to reduce entitlements too. Shut it all down until you get the cuts across the board that you want. The people elected the House to control the purse, and they should use that power efficiently and effectively. Wield it like a fucking sword and CUT!

Gadsden flag
Gadsden flag
September 30, 2023 12:36 pm

Government persists through its willingness to express its power to murder.

It is a simulacrum of authority coerced upon the masses by pain of death.

As said, power for the sake of power, Winston. And that power is a black hole dark star that claims physical rights to the light of your life.

Listening to a Nietzsche podcast. The internal energy of will is expressed in power. Power, fully expressed, must have a recipient of the force of that power. How can there be masters without slaves? How can one manifest power without cruelty or dominance? Yes, I know, steel hand in a velvet glove.

Overheard in a bar last week the story of a dominatrix who did the skat on CEOs. Is this an example of how power (and the powerful) needs cruelty and slavishness to actualize a power dopamine?

Freedom exists through its willingness to…

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 30, 2023 1:06 pm

.Gov shutdown is cheaper than .gov.

Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
September 30, 2023 3:12 pm

Communist shithead Congressman Jamaal Bowman got caught pulling a fire alarm to delay the vote on a continuing resolution which I am hoping will fail/or did fail.
The penalty is under the same statute that let the communist shithead racist bitch Judge Chutkin sentence J6 people to decades in Federal prison. Will the FBI stage a raid and come steal the videotape of the illustrious fool Bowman? Will Kevin and Nancy prevent us from seeing it? We’ll know shortly.

TampaRed
TampaRed
  Harrington Richardson: Resurgent
September 30, 2023 7:34 pm

harry,
here you go,jamaal w/his hand on the alarm —
nothing serious will happen —
i’m so sure of that that i will bet a $100 donation to admin over it —

Dem Lawmaker Pulls Fire Alarm to Disrupt Congressional Vote

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 30, 2023 3:33 pm

I find it strange, the scared rabbits who can’t fathom life without the blubbering bloated big daddy government. Fuck em all shut it down. Fuck the TSA, The military paychecks. Fuck them all.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 30, 2023 3:46 pm

You know they shut the GOV down for 18 days beginning October 1, 2013?

falconflight
falconflight
  Anonymous
September 30, 2023 6:52 pm

My last month with the Feds. Seemed like a special gift just for me. ;0

Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
September 30, 2023 4:38 pm

I know exactly what it costs me since the shutdowns dont mean fuck-all as taxes are still being stolen out of my paycheck. So is the government really shut down? Nope.

But hey, at least CONgress and the Ukrainians still get paid off our dime.

Fuck them all.

ZFG, out.

P.S. take it out of CONgress’ ass.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Zulu Foxtrot Golf
September 30, 2023 7:01 pm

These fucking government pricks aren’t even losing their pay! They get a four to twelve week vacation with no work. When the government Kabuki theatre finally ends, they will come back to work and immediately get a check for back pay plus interest. If you don’t have enough assets to make it for a few weeks without pay, then you obviously failed finance 101 and are living beyond your means!

falconflight
falconflight
  Anonymous
September 30, 2023 7:15 pm

I never received interest, and pay was delayed only once circa 1996. There’s no 12 wk vacas, not even close. You are allowed to hoard your annual leave over a year so that might support an extended vaca, but not 12 wks. Usually employees are forced to take leave over a certain amt accrued. It is called “use or lose.”

w.f. fields
w.f. fields
September 30, 2023 6:35 pm

Eventually, the federal government will work this out

hehehe. I can’t help laughing. This thang has lasted longer than any comedy show on tv or stand up comedian’s career. One person today of con-gress pulled a fire alarm in the capital as voting on the resolution started. Way to go. . . knee-gro. brilliant stuff .. just don’t stop

falconflight
falconflight
September 30, 2023 6:49 pm

Ever moaR Kabuki to enrich the grift.

Anonymous
Anonymous
September 30, 2023 6:58 pm

Fuck these people. I work in the private sector, running my own small business, and; unlike my parents/sister, I am not a worthless fucking parasite! We could cut 90% of government at all levels and most people wouldn’t see a difference. I could give two shits if WIC, EBT, Medicaid/Medicare, Social Security, Government salaries, and Government benefits ended tomorrow. I serve an essential need to everyday rural Americans. Let the fucking cities burn for all I care!

falconflight
falconflight
  Anonymous
September 30, 2023 7:16 pm

Can’t argue with you.

mark
mark
September 30, 2023 7:36 pm

comment image

Be still our beating hearts!

There are two Boomers and one Silent in my house…and the 3 of us will live well through the planned coming GREATER DEPRESSION…the best we can.

Our timing and life spans will be His decision…not theirs.

We are prepped in all ways…especially in the most important…JESUS CHRIST!

The 3 of us despise the so called governement…at age 68…73…and 90…we laugh at the doomed, demonic government.