Current News

/

ArcaMax

Bessent says US will never default as Congress faces endgame

Tony Czuczka, Bloomberg News on

Published in News & Features

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the U.S. “is never going to default” as the deadline for increasing the federal debt ceiling gets closer.

“That is never going to happen,” Bessent said Sunday in an interview with CBS’s "Face the Nation." “We are on the warning track and we will never hit the wall.”

Republican congressional leaders have attached an increase in the debt limit to President Donald Trump’s tax and spending bill, which potentially puts avoiding a default at the mercy of complex negotiations over the legislation. The U.S. Senate returns this week to take up the bill.

Bessent declined to specify an “X date” — the point at which the Treasury runs out of cash and special accounting measures that allow it to stay within the debt ceiling and still make good on federal obligations on time.

“We don’t give out the ‘X date’ because we use that to move the bill forward,” Bessent said. Last month, Bessent told lawmakers that the U.S. was likely to exhaust its borrowing authority by August if the debt ceiling isn’t raised or suspended by then.

Wall Street analysts and private forecasters see the deadline falling sometime between late August and mid-October.

Bessent also pushed back against a warning by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Chief Executive Officer Jamie Dimon that a crack in the bond market “is going to happen.”

“I’ve known Jamie for a long time, and for his entire career he’s made predictions like this,” he said. “Fortunately none of them have come true. That’s why he’s a great banker. He tries to look around the corner.”

“We are going to bring the deficit down slowly,” Bessent said. “This has been a long process, so the goal is to bring it down over the next four years.”

China call

 

After Trump last week accused authorities in Beijing of violating a U.S.-Chinese tariff truce reached in May, Bessent said he’s confident that the latest clash “will be ironed out” in a call between Trump and Chinese President Xi Jinping “very soon.”

White House National Economic Council Director Kevin Hassett said the call is expected to take place this week.

Trump “is going to have a wonderful conversation about the trade negotiations this week with President Xi,” Hassett said on ABC’s "This Week." “That’s our expectation.”

U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer on Friday accused China of failing to comply with elements of the trade agreement brokered in Geneva, saying Beijing continues to “slow down and choke off things like critical minerals and rare-earth magnets.”

“Maybe it’s a glitch in the Chinese system, maybe it’s intentional,” Bessent said Sunday. “We’ll see after the president speaks with the party chairman.”

He also suggested any impact on the U.S. construction industry from Trump’s decision to double US tariffs on steel and aluminum imports to 50% would be offset by benefits to the steel industry

“So is it going to impact the construction industry, maybe,” Bessent told CBS. “But it’s going to impact the steel industry in a great way.

_____


©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus