Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Oct. 13 that the ongoing government shutdown has begun to impact the U.S. economy as it enters its 13th day with no end in sight.
In an interview with Fox Business, he said that the shutdown’s true impact on the economy is not being fully covered by media outlets.
The shutdown, which started on Oct. 1, is now “starting to affect the real economy. It’s starting to affect people’s lives,” he said, although he did not elaborate.
Congress failed to pass a stopgap funding measure before the shutdown was initiated, with Democrats saying that any measure to reopen the government should require an extension of health care subsidies.
Republicans say that the two issues are separate and that the subsidies will end by the end of this year.
Bessent said that in order to allow paychecks to U.S. military service members, the government was having to hold back on payments to other federal workers and services in areas such as the Smithsonian museums and the National Zoo.
“We have to shuffle things around; we have to furlough workers here in D.C. and around the country,” Bessent said in the interview.
He reiterated his previous comments that the shutdown was stalling aid for farmers. Official Treasury economic data will be released after the shutdown ends, Bessent said.
“We have repeatedly made clear that we will sit down with anyone, any time, any place, go back to the White House, to have a bipartisan discussion about reopening the government, reaching a spending agreement that actually improves the quality of life of the American people and addresses the health care crisis that threatens tens of millions of people across the country,” he said.
“If Republicans continue to refuse to extend the Affordable Care Act tax credits, then tens of millions of people are about to experience dramatically increased premiums, co-pays, and deductibles that will result in health insurance costs doubling or tripling or quadrupling.”
“We'll negotiate over health care policy, but only once you do your job and open up the people’s government,” Vance said.







