Those of us who live in the United States woke Tuesday morning to a  “partial government shutdown.” Partial means, roughly speaking, that air  traffic controllers go to work but park rangers do not. The shutdown is  the result of the failure of Congress to pass a budget—or in lieu of a  budget, a continuing resolution—in time for the October 1 start of the  2014 fiscal year.
Even if the shutdown is resolved in the next few  days, another round of chaos looms at mid-month, when Congress must  authorize an increase in the debt ceiling in order for the government to  continue making interest and principal payments on debts that the same  Congress previously authorized the government to accumulate.
Many  conservative Republicans say that measures like government shutdowns and  debt-ceiling freezes are necessary because taxation and government  spending are out of control and public debt is rapidly  becoming  unsustainable. How much truth is there to those charges? Just how bad,  really, is U.S. fiscal policy, and what should be done to fix it? >>>Read more
 
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