The White House and Republicans are painstakingly edging towards a deal to stave off a disastrous US debt default and to end a partial government shutdown now sure to hit the two-week mark.
President Barack Obama met face-to-face with Republican senators and spoke by phone with Republican House Speaker John Boehner on Friday, as subordinates haggled over the terms of an eventual truce to a bitter standoff.
"We are obviously in a better place than we were a few days ago in terms of the constructive approach we have seen," White House spokesman Jay Carney said.
"But there is not an agreement."
The main principles of a compromise emerged in public statements from both sides.
It will include a temporary, or more permanent, extension to US borrowing authority - without which Washington could begin to default on its obligations for the first time in history after October 17.
The government, shuttered since October 1, will be fully reopened, possibly on an interim basis, and there will be some kind of commitment from both sides to work towards an elusive deal to tackle the deficit, rein in spending and possibly to reform social programs and some aspects of the tax code.
Late in the day, Obama and Boehner, longtime foes who have often struggled to close deals, had what both sides said was a constructive conversation.
But there were signs that the White House was driving a hard bargain, as spokesman Jay Carney said that a rise in the debt ceiling could not be linked to long-term fiscal talks with Republicans, because it could set up repeated threats of default in the coming months.
The White House said earlier in the week that it would be open to a six-week extension of the debt ceiling after October 17.
It now appears to be looking for an extension of borrowing authority from the current $US16.7 trillion ($A17.71 trillion) level for a longer duration.
One possible compromise plan is being offered by Republican Senator Susan Collins.
The measure would raise borrowing authority for up to a year, fund the government and repeal a tax on medical devices introduced under Obama's health care law - as an incentive to get conservative Republicans on board.
Such a solution would be somewhat of a facesaver for Republicans who entered the showdown determined to leverage the need to raise the debt ceiling as a way to defund or delay Obamacare.
Republicans from the lower house have offered to talk to Obama about a short-term resolution to fund the government, and then to move to long term budget and fiscal talks.
But the president insists he will not negotiate until both the debt ceiling is raised and the government is reopened.
Republican senators emerged from talks with the president at the White House and told reporters they were optimistic.
Republican Senator Lindsey Graham said he was "confident that in the next 24 to 48 hours the House will produce a continuing resolution that will allow the government to be open in total."
But Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid signaled that Democrats were driving a hard bargain.
The Senate will on Saturday vote on a 15-month extension of the debt ceiling, to take the issue off the table until after the mid-term congressional elections next year.
While the measure is unlikely to become law because it needs House support, it could provide a template for an eventual solution in the event of a longer term fiscal deal between Obama and Republicans.
Hopes for a deal spurred a rally in Asian stocks overnight and Wall Street followed the trend into positive territory in early trade.
If the US debt ceiling is not raised by October 17, the Treasury would run out of money and could begin defaulting on US obligations for the first time in history, with likely dire consequences for the world economy.
New signs of Republican flexibility may have been spurred by devastating polling numbers showing their party brand badly hurt by the political showdown.
An NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll showed 53 per cent of those asked blamed Republicans for the government shutdown and only 31 per cent pinned the blame on Obama.
Some 70 per cent of those polled blamed Republicans for putting their political agenda before what was good for the country, compared to 51 per cent who said the same of Obama.
G20 finance ministers meeting in Washington meanwhile demanded urgent action.
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