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Debt ceiling wrestling matches or de-dollarisation

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Cornwall-based Worldwide Financial Planning writes about the US debt ceiling

Peter McGahan, chief executive of Worldwide Financial Planning

Reluctantly, I write about the US debt ceiling farce. Why? Because headlines are everywhere describing all the potential chaos around the likelihood for the US to default, and each journalist wants the public to read their wonderful variation.

In short, if they defaulted, we are all probably nuked to one degree or another, so describing the impact of the weather on your flowers in varied columns is like stopping a tsunami with those cheap pub toilet tissue papers. Pointless, but it might get attention.

Google ‘debt ceiling’ and you’ll see it repeated over history like ‘A Place in the Sun’. Same old twaddle. Watch the videos, read the previous headlines, or just watch any TV programme. We know how it starts, what happens and how it ends. Avoiding the above nuke is a good plan that no government wants to have on their already dodgy cv.

Donald Trump (USA’s answer to Mussolini and the other cheek to the backside that is the US system) is encouraging Republicans to default. Long sigh.

Financial markets go nuts amid all the above possibilities and sit awaiting the puff of white smoke from the White house chimney that says: ‘Tiz grand, it’s all sorted’.

The US has it set in law that both parties need to agree any debt ceiling increase so it becomes a farcical process where the ‘other side’ uses this moment to negotiate terms they disagree with elsewhere. You could argue it’s a good thing as a check and balance for the US, but not I.

Janet Yellen, has of course assisted with apocalyptic comments (noises) that the government needs to look down the side of the sofa and car seats for a few hundred billion before the second week in June or they are out of cash – default.

Threatening this by using it as a bargaining tool is something my cat wouldn’t do, even after studying economics for a whole week on YouTube. The cost of credit would rise for not only the Fed, but the man on the street, businesses and US states, in an already weakened and bewildered economy. I don’t have the space to talk about the de-dollarisation risk. Its real and they don’t need the above risk on top.