Agreement to increase US debt limit gains enough votes to pass in Senate – with Obama expected to sign it into law immediately Congress has buried the spectre of a US debt default after it finally passed a deficit-cutting package – but the shadow lingered of a possible painful downgrade of the top-notch American credit rating. Just hours before the Treasury’s authority to borrow funds ran out, the Senate voted 74 to 26 to pass a hard-won compromise to lift the US government’s $14.3 trillion debt ceiling to last beyond the November 2012 elections. President Barack Obama, who will seek a second term next year, was expected to immediately sign the deal into law. His signature is set to draw a line under months of bitter partisan squabbling over debt and deficit strategy that had threatened chaos in global financial markets and dented America’s stature as the world’s economic superpower. There was little suspense about the outcome of the vote in the Democratic-controlled Senate. The bill overcame its biggest hurdle late on Monday when the Republican-led House of Representatives passed the $2.1 trillion deficit-reduction plan despite some resistance from Tea Party conservatives and liberal Democrats. Uncertainty remained, however, over whether the budget deal goes far enough in reining in deficits to satisfy major ratings agencies, which have threatened to downgrade the United States’ AAA credit rating. Such a move would raise borrowing costs and act as another drag on the stumbling economy. Ratings agency Standard and Poor’s said in mid-July there was a 50-50 chance it would cut US ratings in the next three months if lawmakers failed to craft a meaningful deficit-cutting plan. S&P could downgrade US ratings soon after the bill is signed by Obama, given that the agency will have all the information it needs to make a decision. Treasury secretary Timothy Geithner said he expected the ratings agencies to take a “careful look” at the situation but he was not sure whether the United States would be spared from a downgrade. “I don’t know. It’s hard to tell,” he told ABC News. The plan calls for $2.1 trillion in spending cuts spread over 10 years, and creates a congressional committee to recommend a deficit-reduction package by late November. That appears to fall short of rating agency S&P’s previous assertion that $4 trillion in deficit-reduction measures would be needed to avoid a downgrade by showing that Washington was putting the country’s finances in order. US Congress US economy US politics United States Barack Obama Economics guardian.co.uk