White House and Republican congressional negotiators on raising the federal debt ceiling are not expected to meet in upcoming hours as the country inches closer to the debt ceiling deadline on June 1.
US Representative Patrick McHenry, a Republican negotiator, said no meetings were scheduled for Saturday.
Republicans leaders were “going to huddle as a team and assess where things stood,” McHenry said at the US Capitol.
He did not comment whether there would be more talks on Sunday.
Two meetings ended on Friday with no progress cited by either side and with negotiators saying they were not sure when new meetings would take place.
There are less than two weeks before June 1, when the US Treasury Department has warned that the federal government could be unable to pay all its debts.
That would trigger a default that could cause chaos in financial markets and spike interest rates.
Biden said in Japan late on Friday US time that he still believed a default could be avoided.
“I still believe we’ll be able to avoid a default and we’ll get something decent done,” Biden told reporters in Hiroshima, Japan, where he is attending a meeting of leaders of the G7.
Biden was upbeat despite the White House acknowledging that “serious differences” remained with Republicans, who control the House of Representatives.
House of Representatives Speaker Kevin McCarthy has said that progress needed to be made on changing the “trajectory” of US government deficit spending and rapidly rising debt.
Republicans are pushing for sharp spending cuts in exchange for the increase in the government’s self-imposed borrowing limit, a move needed regularly to cover costs of spending and tax cuts previously approved by lawmakers.
Republicans control the House by a thin margin, while Biden’s Democrats have a thin Senate majority, making it difficult to strike a deal that would pass both chambers.
Democrats have been pushing to hold spending steady at this year’s levels while Republicans want to return to 2022 levels.
A plan passed by the House last month would cut a wide swath of government spending by 8 per cent next year.
Democrats say that would force average cuts of at least 22 per cent on programs like education and law enforcement, a figure top Republicans have not disputed.
— AAP