What Happens if US Government Shuts Down Over Funding?

FILE - The Capitol is seen late Tuesday night, Sept. 26, 2023, in Washington, as lawmakers work to advance appropriations bills on the House floor.

WASHINGTON — The United States is heading toward a government shutdown this weekend with no foreseeable way out of a deadlock in Congress over hardline Republican calls for deep spending cuts.

The new U.S. fiscal year begins on Oct. 1, but sharp disagreements in the Republican Party over the scale of federal debt has prevented passage of the bills needed to keep the government funded and open.

The credit ratings agency Moody's warned this week that a shutdown would be "credit negative" for U.S. sovereign debt, threatening its top-tier rating and raising the prospect of higher borrowing costs.

With time running out, the Senate has released a bipartisan bill to extend funding and buy lawmakers more time.

But, faced with the threat of a leadership challenge from the right of his party, Republican House Speaker Kevin McCarthy has refrained from bringing a similar bill to the floor, making a shutdown increasingly probable.

FILE - U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., talks to reporters just after voting to advance appropriations bills on the House floor, at the Capitol in Washington, Sept. 26, 2023.

If the U.S. government shuts down Sunday, hundreds of thousands of federal employees would be furloughed without pay, while members of the military and other workers deemed to be essential would continue working without a paycheck.

The American Federation of Government Employees (AFGE) union estimates a full shutdown would mean almost 1.8 million federal workers would not be paid for the duration.

Around 850,000 non-essential workers would be furloughed, according to the non-partisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget.

Once a funding deal is reached these restrictions would be lifted and all affected employees would be paid retroactively, according to the AFGE.

Operations classified as essential will continue to operate.

In past shutdowns, this has meant that benefits checks have continued to be paid, while air traffic controllers, border patrol agents and hospital staff have remained on the job.

However, many services would likely be affected, including new applications for Social Security and Medicare, food and environmental site inspections, and national parks.

The longer a shutdown continues, the greater the impact would be.

Goldman Sachs economists have estimated that a shutdown would impact economic growth in the fourth quarter by 0.2 percentage points for every week it continues.

A stoppage could take two to three weeks to resolve, Goldman economists wrote in a recent note to clients, "as neither side seems likely to make immediate concessions."

Assuming the shutdown ends before the year is out, Goldman estimates growth will increase early next year by the same amount it declined in the fourth quarter, while Oxford Economics researchers expect half of the loss to be made up.

The loss of government worker output would cost annual economic growth around 0.1 percentage points per week, and would be irreversible, according to Oxford Economics.

A shutdown could also have an indirect impact on the economy as federal workers without pay begin to curtail their spending.

The shutdown already appears to be having an impact on Wall Street, with major stock indexes losing steam as the deadline approaches.

Economists worry that a shutdown would also pause the publication of federal government data.

This is a real concern for the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has said it will be guided by data as it decides interest rate policy going forward. The Fed recently slowed its aggressive pace of hikes as it tackles stubborn inflation.

Without fresh data, the central bank would be forced to make decisions with serious ramifications for the U.S. economy without having a clear picture of where things stand.

While a short shutdown would have a limited long-term impact, it could become a significant issue if lawmakers fail to reach agreement swiftly.