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3 October 2025NEWS • 8 October 2025
US Government Shutdown: Causes, Consequences and the Road to a deal

Harun Thilak, Head of Global Capital Markets NA
The United States Federal government entered a partial shutdown on October 1 2025, following the expiration of fiscal year 2025 funding at midnight on September 30, thereby affecting hundreds of thousands of federal workers and disrupting essential services. This event, the first shutdown since 2019, highlights ongoing partisan divisions in Congress and the executive branch. With approximately 750,000 “non-essential” federal employees furloughed and another 1.4 million working without pay, the shutdown has immediate repercussions on daily operations, from national park closures to delayed veterans' benefits. Its broader implications extend to economic stability and data transparency, echoing patterns from historical precedents.
Capitol Hill Standoff
The primary cause of the 2025 shutdown is a failure to enact appropriations bills or a continuing resolution (CR) to bridge funding gaps. Congress must pass 12 annual spending bills to fund government operations, but deep divisions between Republicans and Democrats derailed negotiations. House Republicans, led by Speaker Mike Johnson, pushed a "clean" CR to extend funding at current levels through mid-November, aiming to avoid policy riders. Senate Democrats rejected this, insisting on provisions to extend Affordable Care Act (ACA) subsidies expiring at year's end, citing the need to mitigate healthcare cost spikes amid inflation. Both parties' proposals failed Senate votes on October 6, with neither achieving the 60-vote threshold to overcome filibusters.
Economic Hit - and a US Data “Void”
Economically, most estimates project a $15 billion drag on US GDP per week of Government shutdown - equivalent to about 0.2 percentage points of annualized growth. There is a hit to consumer spending from furloughed workers, while secondary effects include negative impacts to businesses concentrated around federal office hubs. A prolonged shutdown could strain key sectors such as aviation, with potential air traffic personnel shortages leading to flight delays, thereby disrupting the functioning of an interconnected global landscape.
Critically, the shutdown halts key U.S. data releases, creating information voids at a pivotal economic juncture. The Bureau of Labor Statistics delayed the September jobs report, originally slated for October 3, leaving the Federal Reserve without timely labor insights amid rate-cut deliberations. Other postponed metrics may include the Consumer Price Index (CPI) on October 15, which informs Social Security adjustments, and trade deficit data, potentially distorting market signals and policy decisions ahead of the Fed meeting on October 29. Markets are currently expecting the Fed to cut rates by another 25 basis points in October (following the 25 basis points cut in September), but the uncertainty created by this data void could potentially lead to pushback on the current market expectations as we approach the meeting.
Compromise: The Only Way Out
Resolution could unfold through several paths, but compromise remains the key. Democrats might concede to a clean CR if public pressure mounts, especially if a few moderate senators consider defecting. A compromise could link reopening to future ACA talks, as the US administration has hinted at negotiations post-funding. Republicans could potentially offer partial subsidy extensions in a shortened CR. As disruption intensifies with each passing day of the shutdown, pressure rises on both parties to arrive at a suitable “middle ground” through compromise. History shows that shutdowns end when political costs outweigh gains, often leading to temporary measures as the proverbial can gets kicked down the road.
Until then, investors should tread with caution as an economy already under mounting pressure from a sluggish labor market and weak consumer sentiment could potentially face Fed inaction at the upcoming meeting, citing an information void from inadequate US economic data.
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