In one of her last acts as Treasury Secretary, Janet Yellen says her agency will start taking “extraordinary measures,” or ...
The breach of the debt ceiling officially starts the clock on how long Trump and Congress will have to act to avoid a ...
The US Treasury Department will start taking "extraordinary measures" next week to avoid risking a default on government debt ...
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is warning that the government will reach its debt limit on Tuesday and will need to take “extraordinary measures” to avoid risking a potentially catastrophic ...
It is not clear how long Congress will have to secure a deal on funding or raising the debt ceiling again once the measures ...
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said her department will need to start taking so-called "extraordinary measures" to prevent the nation from hitting the debt ceiling as early as January 14.
As a result, “Treasury does not expect that it will be necessary to start taking extraordinary measures on January 2 to prevent the United States from defaulting on its obligations," she said.
Yellen said in the letter that the debt ceiling could be reached between Jan. 14 and Jan. 23, at which point the Treasury would, "start taking extraordinary ... The United States has never ...
at which time it will be necessary for Treasury to start taking extraordinary measures,” Yellen wrote in a letter to congressional leadership. The debt limit has been suspended since June 2023 ...
Yellen, in a letter on Friday to congressional leaders just three days before the Biden administration turns over US government control to President-elect Donald Trump and his team, said the Treasury ...
“Extraordinary measures” will be needed to keep the US from defaulting on its obligations if the nation’s debt ceiling isn’t raised or suspended by mid-January, Treasury Secretary Janet ...