US cities with military bases risk economic damage in debt ceiling fight
The United States could default on its debt in less than two weeks, and cities with a large military presence risk if lawmakers don鈥檛 act.
A default would mean the government won鈥檛 be able to meet , which include salaries paid to federal workers and payments to Social Security recipients. About a sixth of government spending goes toward national defense, a quarter of which is to pay military personnel, according to the Congressional Budget Office.
If the United States can鈥檛 pay its national defense bills, cities with large military bases face a potentially massive fallout, encompassing missed payments, rising debt and a significant pullback in spending that would cut into local businesses鈥� bottom lines.
鈥淎 default on the federal debt would be an economic disaster in many ways, but it will especially hit cities with high government employment, so military communities around the country are especially vulnerable,鈥� John Mayo, professor of economics, business and public policy at Georgetown University, told CNN.
鈥淭hese are middle-class families that have a high paycheck-to-paycheck living ratio. They don鈥檛 have a lot of extra income, don鈥檛 have a lot of savings and if the payments to those families are delayed, they鈥檒l have to make really horrible choices.鈥�
It remains unclear what payments the Treasury Department would prioritize or how it would service the government鈥檚 debts once it runs out of cash.
Workers on government payrolls, such as military personnel, likely wouldn鈥檛 get laid off if a default drags on, according to an analysis from the Brookings Institution, but their payments would probably be delayed. That could further damage local economies grappling with that could unfold even ahead of a possible default.
At the end of March, there were at least 1.7 million Americans employed by the Defense Department in all states, including civilians, according to government data.
Delayed payments could have massive impacts for US cities with large military bases such as San Diego, San Antonio and El Paso, Texas 鈥� and even more for small cities that don鈥檛 have diversified economies and rely heavily on the military鈥檚 presence to drive activity.
Federal workers could get stuck pulling from their savings accounts or relying on credit to make everyday purchases, Mayo said. They could also make 鈥渄rastic spending cuts鈥� on discretionary purchases, such as dining out or watching films, hurting local businesses. If that goes on long enough, those businesses could lay people off or even go bust.
San Antonio is home to one of the largest joint bases operated by the Defense Department, consisting of four military installations: Fort Sam Houston, Camp Bullis, Randolph Air Force Base and Lackland Air Force Base.
Even though the region has a diversified economy, that won鈥檛 be enough to shield households from significant damage if payments to federal workers are delayed, according to Thomas Tunstall, an economist at the University of Texas at San Antonio.
In the far-west Texas city of El Paso, Fort Bliss and William Beaumont Army Medical Center pay more than $3.5 billion in wages and salaries to their military and civilian employees, according to Thomas Fullerton, an economist at the University of Texas at El Paso.
鈥淏usiness cash flows will be disrupted by the paycheck delays as well as any employee layoffs or furloughs on the base, at the medical center, or by companies that subcontract at either facility,鈥� Fullerton told CNN in an emailed statement. He added that 鈥渢he impacts will be especially severe for low-wage and income households.鈥�
San Diego is another major city with a heavy military presence. It houses one of the largest naval bases in the country 鈥� and a robust tourism scene. The metropolitan area had more than 193,000 employees in leisure and hospitality last year, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
If payments to all workers on government payrolls are delayed, they could first cut back on leisure spending, so tourism businesses would be in big trouble, according to Jeffrey Clemens, an economist at the University of California, San Diego.
鈥淭he local economy would be impacted primarily through any effects of late wages and salary payments on the consumption of restaurants, entertainment, purchases of electronics and other consumer goods by those households,鈥� Clemens said. 鈥淚f the federal government goes into default and there鈥檚 to some extent a seizing up of economic activity everywhere, I would certainly expect people鈥檚 summer vacation plans to be impacted and places like San Diego that have an important tourism sector will be adversely affected by that.鈥�
President Joe Biden and House Speaker Kevin McCarthy struck an optimistic tone earlier this week that negotiations would result in a successful raising of the debt ceiling as soon as this weekend, but those negotiations , putting talks on pause for the moment.