Latest Business News on Fox Business 10月29日 22:31
政府停摆料致经济损失高达140亿美元
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美国经济正面临政府持续停摆的严峻挑战,国会预算办公室(CBO)的最新分析预测,此次停摆可能导致经济损失高达140亿美元。尽管大多数经济影响是暂时的,但实际国内生产总值(GDP)预计将遭受一定程度的永久性打击。此次停摆已进入第29天,两党在结束僵局上仍无进展。CBO分析了不同停摆时长的三种情景,并指出停摆时间越长,对经济的负面影响越大。共和党指责民主党将政治置于民众利益之上,而民主党则将矛头指向共和党拒绝谈判,尤其是在奥巴马医改补贴的续签问题上。此次停摆已成为美国历史上第二长的政府停摆事件。

💰 **经济损失预估**:根据国会预算办公室(CBO)的最新分析,美国经济可能因持续的政府停摆而损失高达140亿美元。虽然许多影响是暂时的,但实际GDP预计将遭受一定程度的永久性下降,具体损失范围在70亿至140亿美元之间(以2025年美元计价)。

⏳ **停摆时长与影响**:CBO评估了为期四周、六周和八周的停摆情景。分析表明,停摆时间越长,对经济的负面影响越大。例如,为期八周的停摆可能导致年化实际GDP增长率在2025年第四季度下降1.0至2.0个百分点。

🏛️ **两党僵局与核心分歧**:政府停摆已持续29天,两党在结束僵局上仍未达成一致。共和党指责民主党将政治置于民众利益之上,而民主党则将责任归咎于共和党拒绝谈判,特别是关于奥巴马医改(ACA)补贴的续签问题。ACA补贴定于2025年底到期,民主党坚持在任何资金协议中包含其延长条款,但共和党则希望在改革的前提下进行讨论,并拒绝将其与无关的联邦拨款法案捆绑。

📜 **历史性停摆**:此次政府停摆已成为美国历史上第二长的停摆事件,仅次于2018-2019年期间因边境墙资金争议而导致的35天停摆。

FIRST ON FOX: The U.S. economy could lose up to $14 billion due to the ongoing government shutdown, a new analysis said Wednesday.

The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released new projections that show the shutdown is likely to have a temporary negative impact on the U.S. economy, though gross domestic product (GDP) — adjusted to remove the effect of inflation — is expected to take a modest permanent hit.

It is Day 29 of the government shutdown, with Democrats and Republicans appearing no closer to a deal on ending the standoff than when it began on Oct. 1.

House Budget Committee Chairman Jodey Arrington, R-Texas, asked the CBO for an analysis earlier this month of how the shutdown will impact the U.S. economy.

BATTLEGROUND REPUBLICANS HOLD THE LINE AS JOHNSON PRESSURES DEMS ON SHUTDOWN

The office sent Arrington an initial response on Oct. 17, which said that "the government shutdown will have negative effects on the economy, although many of those effects will be temporary."

"The effects will increase with a longer shutdown," the initial analysis said.

The most recent analysis looks at three scenarios — a four-week shutdown ending Oct. 29, a six-week shutdown ending Nov. 12 and an eight-week shutdown ending Nov. 26.

"In CBO’s assessment, the shutdown will delay federal spending and have a negative effect on the economy that will mostly, but not entirely, reverse once the shutdown ends," the analysis said.

SCREAMING MATCH ERUPTS BETWEEN HAKEEM JEFFRIES, MIKE LAWLER AS GOVERNMENT SHUTDOWN CHAOS CONTINUES

However, CBO projected that real GDP will be lower in the fourth quarter of 2025 than it would have been otherwise.

"Depending on its length, the government shutdown will reduce annualized real GDP growth in that quarter by 1.0 to 2.0 percentage points. After the shutdown, real GDP will be temporarily higher than it would have been otherwise," CBO said. 

"Although most of the decline in real GDP will be recovered eventually, CBO estimates that between $7 billion and $14 billion (in 2025 dollars) will not be."

CBO noted that some variables, including responses to the shutdown by the Trump administration and federal employees affected, still mean the final effects remain to be seen.

"Democrats are playing politics, and the American people are paying the price. Even the independent, nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office confirmed the economy will lose 1% in growth because of the Schumer shutdown. For hardworking families, that means higher unemployment, lower wages, and less money in their pockets," Arrington told Fox News Digital.

"And while Democrats believe ‘every day gets better for them,’ the same cannot be said for the American people. In fact, a six-week shutdown means growth would be 1.5 percentage points lower, an eight-week shutdown would reduce growth by 2.0 percentage points, and it only gets worse from there."

Democrats, however, have blamed Republicans for refusing to negotiate with them on a bipartisan solution to end the shutdown and make changes that they say will save healthcare for millions of Americans.

The government shutdown is already the second-longest in history behind the 2018-2019 shutdown during President Donald Trump’s first term, when Democrats and Republicans were at odds over funding for Trump’s border wall.

That standoff lasted 35 days, just six days longer than the current fiscal fight.

Obamacare has emerged as the critical divide this time, with Democrats pledging to reject any funding deal that does not extend Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies that were enhanced during the COVID-19 pandemic. Those subsidies are set to expire by the end of 2025 without congressional action.

Republican leaders have signaled they are willing to hold discussions on extending the Obamacare subsidies — albeit with significant reforms — but are refusing to pair it with an unrelated federal funding bill.

The GOP-led plan, which passed the House on Sept. 19, would keep the government funded through Nov. 21 at roughly similar levels to fiscal year (FY) 2025. The measure is called a continuing resolution (CR) and is aimed at giving negotiators time to strike a longer-term deal on FY 2026 funding.

But the CR has failed 13 times in the Senate, where several Democrats are needed to reach the 60-vote threshold to overcome a filibuster.

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政府停摆 美国经济 国会预算办公室 GDP 奥巴马医改 Politics US Economy CBO Government Shutdown ACA Subsidies
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