The stakes of those talks are elevated this year as the federal government is expected to hit the $31.4 trillion debt ceiling by summer. Failure to act by that time could trigger a potentially disastrous default. McCarthy wants Biden to agree to spending cuts before his narrow Republican House majority would agree to raise the debt ceiling. Biden insists that Republicans must agree to a "clean" debt ceiling increase without a preliminary deal on spending. "If people know the dire situation we're currently in, who would ever walk out of that and say you just have to pass a clean debt ceiling?" the California Republican told Reuters. "We're at a tipping point," McCarthy said of the nation's fiscal position. "Very seldom do we ever get together as members outside the chambers. We do that in classified briefings and ... I think this is just as important as any security issue." Swagel is expected to appear at Wednesday's 4 p.m. (2100 GMT) briefing alongside Republican House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington and the panel's top Democrat, Representative Brendan Boyle.
Each party blames the other for the country's fiscal position. Republicans say spending under Biden has added to the national debt, while Democrats point to tax cuts for businesses and wealthy individuals that were passed under former President Donald Trump and cost the budget $2 trillion in revenue.
Biden and McCarthy last met over a month ago at the White House, and the speaker said he hoped Wednesday's meeting with Democrats would spur the president to move forward on talks.
Neither Biden's proposal nor the one Arrington's committee is preparing would result in a balanced budget.
In a blog post this week, Swagel said Congress could "nearly stabilize" the growth of federal debt by reducing deficits by an average of $500 billion a year for a decade-long savings of $5 trillion, a sum that dwarfs the combined 10-year savings proposed by Biden and Arrington. Overall, CBO projects that annual deficits will average $2 trillion between 2024 and 2033, approaching pandemic-era records by the end of the decade. (Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Scott Malone and Bill Berkrot)
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