America’s brinkmanship
http://koreajoongangdaily.joins.com/news/article/article.aspx?aid=2979063
Americas brinkmanship
The U.S. government barely avoided a potentially dreadful default on its debt thanks to the House of Representatives passage Wednesday night of an earlier Senate bill on next years budget and the national debt - just an hour and half before the deadline the U.S. Treasury had been warning of. Otherwise, the bitter fight on Capitol Hill that shut down the U.S. government could have caused an even bigger disaster in the world economy than the global financial crisis in 2008.
But the problem didnt end yesterday. The congressional vote is nothing but a temporary postponement until early next year of another vote on the snowballing national debt and whether to raise the debt ceiling. The federal government will be paralyzed again unless Congress hammers out a bipartisan budget agreement by Jan. 15. The time bomb will start to tick again if Congress fails to raise the debt ceiling - currently fixed at $16.7 trillion - upward by Feb. 7.
This deplorable situation primarily stems from an intense political battle between the Democratic Party and the Republican Party. Both sides appear to regard each other as enemies rather than political partners, based on the stubborn conviction that compromise translates into defeat. The Republican leadership in particular fell short of demonstrating mature statesmanship after being led by the nose by the so-called Tea Party loyalists, a minority hardliner group in the Republican Party that is against both big budget deficits and passionately against President Barack Obamas health care reforms.
~snip~
Rome did not fall due to external factors. It fell because of its fiscal policy and severe political divisions. The invasion of German tribes was merely the final blow. Ceaseless battles in Washington not only hurt Americas leadership, but also endanger the world economy. It is time for U.S. politicians to do some serious soul-searching.