WASHINGTON — The International Monetary  Fund urged U.S. lawmakers Wednesday to raise the nation’s borrowing  limit. It warned that inaction could lead to a spike in interest rates  that would harm the U.S. economy and world financial markets. The  debt limit is the amount the government can borrow to help finance its  operations. The United States reached its $14.3 trillion borrowing limit  in May. It is at risk of defaulting on its debt if it doesn’t raise  that limit by Aug. 2. President Barack Obama and Republican lawmakers  have been at odds on a plan to raise it. The borrowing limit  should be increased “expeditiously to avoid a severe shock to the  economy and world financial markets,” the IMF said in its annual report  on the U.S. economy. Republicans are insisting on substantial spending  cuts before they agree to an increase, including cuts in Medicare.  Democrats say they want any deal to include some tax increases. The  IMF also warned in its annual report that rising U.S. budget deficits  pose a risk to the economy. But it advocates a long-term strategy for  reducing those deficits, not steep immediate cuts or tax increases.  Cutting the deficit too quickly could slow the weak U.S. recovery, the  fund said. The U.S. economy will grow this year and next but at a  weak pace, the IMF forecasts. The fund projects the economy will expand  2.5 percent this year and 2.7 percent in 2012. Consumers are still  paying off debts, which will reduce their buying power. And budget cuts  at the federal, state and local levels will also reduce demand. The  IMF’s forecast is below recent projections by the Federal Reserve. The  Fed expects the economy will grow by as much as 3.3 percent next year.  Many private forecasters, however, are more pessimistic and closer to  the IMF’s view. The IMF’s warnings on the U.S. deficits echo  recent statements from major credit rating agencies such as Standard  & Poor’s and Moody’s. They have warned that they may have to  downgrade the United States’ credit rating if a deal on the debt ceiling  isn’t reached and progress toward cutting the deficits isn’t made. Such  a downgrade would have “significant global repercussions,” the IMF  said, given “the central role of U.S. Treasury bonds in world financial  markets.” The budget deficit is projected to reach $1.4 trillion  this year, above last year’s $1.29 trillion gap and just below a record  $1.41 trillion reached in 2009. The IMF has 187 member nations and  lends money to countries with troubled finances. It also regularly  reviews major national economies to look for signs of trouble that could  impact the world economy.
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