Another government is about to shut down. This can have a different impact on the economy.

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Another government is about to shut down. This can have a different impact on the economy.

Legislation to fund much of the US government appears to be in jeopardy this week, with another partial government shutdown likely to strike at midnight on Friday.

But the impact of a possible stoppage could be felt differently in the economic sector this time. Funding for sectors such as the Commerce Department (which releases some economic data) and the Agriculture Department (which administers food benefits) is not set to be affected, however, no matter what happens next week.

Budgets for other key departments — from the Labor Department (which releases the most closely watched economic data) to government agencies involved in keeping America’s airport operations afloat — sit amid what could be a hot week on Capitol Hill.

Ongoing talks to end the shutdown stalled over the weekend after federal agents shot and killed a U.S. citizen during an ongoing protest in Minneapolis. According to multiple videos of the incident, Alex Pretty, the man was disarmed by agents before being shot.

The shooting quickly reignited tensions after another deadly shooting there earlier this month. Senate Democrats vowed to block a funding bill on the docket this week that would, among other things, fund the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).

Protesters against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on January 25 on the streets of downtown Minneapolis on March 25 when federal agents shot and killed US citizen Alex Pretty, a 37-year-old ICU nurse, after struggling with him on a snowy sidewalk. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images) · Roberto Schmidt via Getty Images

“Senate Democrats will not allow the current DHS funding bill to move forward,” Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement, adding that the offices of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), which are part of the larger Department of Homeland Security, need “transformation.”

He was joined by prominent Democrats who last worked to end the shutdown. In fact, the party seems united in opposing any DHS funding for now. Any funding legislation needs 60 votes to advance, which means a coalition of Democrats could block it.

Schumer has called for passage of five other funding bills — but both partisan and logistical concerns will make that difficult this week.

In any case, with only six funding bills on the issue, a shutdown Friday would have more limited economic effects than last fall’s shutdown.

There are 12 annual appropriations bills needed to fully fund the U.S. government, and six have already been approved by the president.

The key question, as Henrietta Trez of Ved Partners put it in a note, is “will all six remaining appropriations bills, which cover about 78% of the federal government, or just the Department of Homeland Security see a funding shortfall on Friday.”

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