Where Data Tells the Story
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The five-week long U.S. government shutdown between December 2018 and January 2019 reduced U.S. GDP by $3 billion, an analysis by the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office found. Lost output from furloughed federal workers, delayed or lost government spending and wage payments as well as reduced demand cost the economy $11 billion in the short term between the two quarters affected by the shutdown. A total of $8 billion of this was estimated to have been made up after the shutdown ended on January 25. Of the total delayed federal spending of $18 billion over the five-week period, $3 billion was connected to the wages of furloughed employees, which is non-recoverable spending, while $6 billion were in wages expected to be paid out late to essential employees after the shutdown ended. The remaining $9 billion was made up by government spending on good and services, which would also only be partially caught up on after the shutdown.
As of Tuesday, September 30, the U.S. is heading for another government shutdown as neither an agreement on the necessary budget legislation nor on a so-called stopgap bill to fund the government through November 21 has been reached. As Congress needs to buy more time to agree on actual 2025/26 spending bills, a stopgap is likely the only solution to avert a shutdown from 12.01 a.m. Wednesday onward, but its future is uncertain as Republicans and Democrats can not agree on specifics, especially on healthcare. While Republicans have a majority in the Senate, it is to slim to reach the 60 votes needed to pass budget legislation.