US Moves to Avert Economic Meltdown

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TERENCE HUNT | January 22, 2008 11:10 PM EST | AP

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Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, right, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, second from left, House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, center,and Sen Joseph Lieberman, I-Conn., left, speak to reporters at the White House, Tuesday, Jan. 22, 2008, in Washington, after meeting with President Bush about the global market turmoil.(AP Photo/Ron Edmonds)

WASHINGTON — Jolted by global recession fears, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates Tuesday, and President Bush and leaders of Congress joined in a rare show of cooperation in promising urgent action to pump up the economy with upwards of $150 billion in tax cuts and government spending.

Market meltdowns overnight around the globe and growing anxiety at home stirred lawmakers and the administration toward swift action, possibly within a few weeks. Wall Street plummeted as the day began, following Asian stocks, then warily eased its sell-off after the Fed ordered the biggest cut on record in a key interest rate. The Dow Jones industrials, down 465 points at one point, closed the day off 128.

The Fed, announcing its action after an emergency video conference Monday night, indicated further rate reductions were likely, aimed at encouraging people and companies to start spending again.

"The urgency that we feel at home is now even more urgent as we see the impact of our markets on others," House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said after both Democratic and Republican lawmakers met with Bush at the White House.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said the goal was to get a deal through Congress and on Bush's desk within roughly three weeks _ lightning speed compared with the usual snail's pace on Capitol Hill. His Republican counterpart, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, agreed the aim was action in the next few weeks and said, "That, by the standards in Congress, is pretty fast."

Bush expressed confidence that he and the Democratic-led Congress could put aside bitter differences that have marked his presidency.

"I believe we can find common ground to get something done that's big enough, effective enough so that an economy that is inherently strong gets a boost _ to make sure that this uncertainty doesn't translate into more economic woes for our workers and small business people," Bush said in the Cabinet Room.

Later, announcing the creation of a panel to educate people about their finances, Bush said he thought there would be an agreement "in relatively short order."

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The White House meeting was intended to show the world that Bush and his Democratic adversaries recognize the gravity of the economic slowdown and are serious about protecting consumers and investors who have watched their holdings shrink. Wall Street and global markets fear the stimulus package outlined by Bush is not enough to avert a recession. The Dow Jones industrial average is down nearly 10 percent since the beginning of the year _ its worst first 14 trading days ever.

Official Washington was accentuating the positive.

"I really feel good that we have an opportunity to do something together," Reid said, standing in the White House driveway with Pelosi after talking with Bush. Reid said the size of a deal suggested by Bush was "a good number."

Administration officials are focusing on rebates of $800 to $1,600 for individuals and couples and so-called bonus depreciation to allow companies to deduct 50 percent of business investments made this year. Democrats say the package also should include boosts in unemployment benefits, food stamp payments and the Medicaid health care program for the poor and disabled. Talks between Pelosi and Minority Leader John Boehner, R-Ohio, have focused on smaller tax rebates of perhaps $500 for individuals.

Like Bush, lawmakers would not discuss what a compromise plan would look like, stressing cooperation rather than potential differences over details.

"This is about one thing in this package: Is it a stimulus?" Pelosi said "So whatever it is that we are considering, it must meet that one criterion: Does it stimulate the economy? Does it put money into the hands of those who will spend it?"

When the Democratic leaders were asked if they agreed with Bush's statement that the economy is inherently strong, Pelosi said, "I certainly hope so."

Reid said the House would pass a package first and send it to the Senate. Pelosi, Boehner and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson planned to talk over breakfast Wednesday.

Paulson went to Capitol Hill for talks on the ingredients of the economic package. "Time is of the essence and the president stands ready to work on a bipartisan basis to enact economic growth legislation as soon as possible," he said earlier in a speech at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Many analysts say the United States already has tumbled into a recession _ a notion rejected by the White House. "We are not forecasting a recession," spokeswoman Dana Perino said. "Clearly there is a slowdown."

Leaving open the possibility of a bigger stimulus package, she said, "I'm not going to close the door but I'm not suggesting that anyone believes it has to be bigger" than the roughly $150 billion figure already discussed. Later, she said the White House has not "seen higher numbers floated by members of Congress" and that Bush believes the package he has outlined is "the right amount."

The Fed's rate cut caught Washington by surprise. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and his colleagues approved the cut Monday night after global markets were slammed by rising concerns that weakness in the world's largest economy was spreading worldwide.

"The world's stock markets are in meltdown, so the Fed came in with an inter-meeting move to try to stop the panic," said Christopher Rupkey, senior economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi.

The reduction in the federal funds rate from 4.25 percent to 3.5 percent marked the biggest reduction in this target rate for overnight loans on records going back to 1990. It marked the first time the Fed has changed rates between meetings since 2001, when the central bank was battling the combined impacts of a recession and the terrorist attacks.

Commercial banks responded by announcing similar cuts of three-quarter of a percent in their prime lending rate, the benchmark for millions of business and consumer loans. The action will mean the prime lending rate will drop from 7.25 percent down to 6.50 percent.

Analysts said the fact that the Fed did not wait until its meeting next week to cut rates underscored the seriousness of the situation. The Fed was expected to cut rates further, possibly as soon as their next meeting on Jan. 29-30, if there are continued signs that the economy is weakening.

"This move by the Fed was essential," said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor who is now a senior analyst with the Stanford Financial Group in Washington. "Bernanke promised in a speech earlier this month to take substantive action in a timely and decisive manner."

___

Associated Press writers Martin Crutsinger, Andrew Taylor, Deb Riechmann and Ben Feller contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — Jolted by global recession fears, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates Tuesday, and President Bush and leaders of Congress joined in a rare show of cooperation in promising ur...
WASHINGTON — Jolted by global recession fears, the Federal Reserve slashed interest rates Tuesday, and President Bush and leaders of Congress joined in a rare show of cooperation in promising ur...
 
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Energy issue?
I cant sit through a movie myself "Change" change"
i tap my spoon on the table and such is the news about asian economies that really are confidant about the new moisterisers and fertilizers that should be in the market soon....although investors are showing mired ..



After the fall of the former US led harvard manufactured The world economy ,we can now easily judge our organisations and corporations from the involvement and agencies consultants that still bear new identity but are carrying on.....although the wheel will turn little bit by internationa governments that would like to intentionally maintain thier posture and they even are adcvocates of 'slowdown' to advance with towards global econony and have been paying around its requisite fringes like privateisation..

The Global economy that will mostly deopend on Production and at very high level ,like already moscow has strongly begun millionaire products towards its middle income groups......


many mystical services ,banking deals like 'home improvement loans' 'micro-finance'will require stronger holds ,and capaicitating within from issues like 'terrorism' language and communication barriers' media disadvantages to marketters in asia/africa......


right now USa is least literate over time and tide of globalisation although it is very difficult to compete with some of its services that have made presentations in its suburb cities...the stockists have nothing really frankly for any buziness out of tune from real globalisation ''''''

there musat be serious recognition and within very shortest span ................The world is ready to light up like a Globe .......


    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:13 AM on 01/24/2008

There is literally hundreds of TRILLIONS of dollars of debt in CDO's, SIV's and other exotic rocket science equation invented debt, world wide at this point. A worldwide building mania has been funded by these instruments. There are tiny one horse towns all over mid America building $300,000 condo's, usually in the guise of historic redevelopment, funded in part by these exotic debt instruments that were really backed by nothing more than ones and zeroes, moving constantly from computer to computer in a giant shell game. Unfortunately, the shell game was cancelled, due to rising level of lack of interest. The great unravelling has just begun.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:37 PM on 01/23/2008

The balloon is out of air. Inflation is not the worry, re-inflation to normalcy is what we need. We need to end the indentured servitude of tens of millions of american families and increase their wages dramatically to allow consumption to make up for a dearth of investment and to allow increased savings and debt take downs to provide more resources to get investment up. One way to do that is to have the Fed, Treasury and the Congress apply pressure on credit card companies and unsecured loan companies to slash their extortionate rates to better correspond with market reality and give the indentured consumer some slack. Also, we need a law to prevent inherent conflicts of interest at the top. How can a nation so dependent on oil have oilmen at the helm ?! This is a recipe for disaster. Without Bush / Cheney the federal government could easily put a solar panel on every roof in America and smash the dominance of big oil and the OPEC cartel. It might also save us from extinction as well. God forbid the indentured public did'nt have to feed the beast every month when the pointless oil / gas utility bill needs to be paid. Why are the capitalists so afraid of freeing the public ? The public won't bite. If you don't free them though, they may. We are less a democracy than a nation 'of the coporations, by the corporations, for the corporations'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:21 AM on 01/23/2008

The balloon is out of air. Inflation is not the worry, re-inflation to normalcy is what we need. We need to end the indentured servitude of tens of millions of american families and increase their wages dramatically to allow consumption to make up for a dearth of investment and to allow increased savings and debt take downs to provide more resources to get investment up. One way to do that is to have the Fed, Treasury and the Congress apply pressure on credit card companies and unsecured loan companies to slash their extortionate rates to better correspond with market reality and give the indentured consumer some slack. Also, we need a law to prevent inherent conflicts of interest at the top. How can a nation so dependent on oil have oilmen at the helm ?! This is a recipe for disaster. Without Bush / Cheney the federal government could easily put a solar panel on every roof in America and smash the dominance of big oil and the OPEC cartel. It might also save us from extinction as well. God forbid the indentured public did'nt have to feed the beast every month when the pointless oil / gas utility bill needs to be paid. Why are the capitalists so afraid of freeing the public ? The public won't bite. If you don't free them though, they may. We are less a democracy than a nation 'of the coporations, by the corporations, for the corporations'.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:12 AM on 01/23/2008

Board--Take this bribe that Bush is sending to you and DONATE IT TO THE CANDIDATE OF YOUR CHOICE!

Make those criminal bastards regret this more than any thing they have ever done!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 AM on 01/23/2008


The problem seems to be that truthfully, interests rates, in order to bring more investment and driving capital into our economy and nation, should actually right now be at about 9-10% !!
Of course, that would devastate our housing market and a major part of our economy for good...
However, if there was a way to protect existing rates and ARMS from expanding on homes, business and property, maybe freezing them for 5-10 years so they cannot be effected, giving a determined date a few months away when the rates would then rise... Much needed money would be moving like crazy to buy up to that date. Rules to protect the market from speculation would be needed, but could easily be put in place if the focus is maintained on bringing back our economy and giving our old and worn out dollar back some of its strength.
Bush and his policies have trounced our dollar and treated it like toilet paper.
This idea is probably impossible and crazy, I know, but it seems something on a very major scale like this is what needs to be done...
Sitting back and doing nothing, letting things "fix themselves" seems to be absolutely much more dangerous. This Tax cut will evaporate like dew on a hot day, then we'll be left with nothing, feeling stupid. Again.
Disasters definitely seem to be looming.
God bless the U.S.A.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:40 PM on 01/22/2008

Want to cure the ills of this economy?
1)Impeach Cheyney
2)Impeach Bush
3)End Iraq War
4)End their trademark Cynicism
5)Now we should begin to lay the groundwork for real concern for the American people and come to economic solutions that we can trust. Until then, I don't want to hear any Bushit plans for economic stimulus that we can only expect to benefit his wealthy and corporate backers. What we need is a political purge!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:25 PM on 01/22/2008

Bush + Plan = Failure

I'm betting that the elite will order the Democratic Party to impeach Bush for incompetence, not because he lied about Iraq, but because they fear the economic woes he could further unleash.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:53 PM on 01/22/2008

The most stupid "President" in United States history is trying to give the U.S. an economic boost. The guy who got a C in Econ at Yale. And that was the guy Dumbya paid to take the course. This inept idiot has fucked up everything in life, first in the private sector and now as our chimp in chief. Just go back to Crawford you stupid shit until next January.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:51 PM on 01/22/2008

The White House and the Feds seriously think that most Americans will spend any incentives (especially only $1,600) on frivilous things? Most people who make under $50K that I know will be spending it to dig out of the hole they are currently in - not buying flat screen tv's -or putting it into savings (the more likely scenario). This is their idea of a solution for the middle class? The better question is what happens after the rebates? How will we fix this mess with ridiculous gas prices, and the resulting costs that are passed on to every necessity we buy? Now that most of the middle class has depleted their savings on medical bills and emergencies, how will this rebate fix the long term problems?
Lest anyone post anything about how stupid people are to get themselves into this kind of situation, the reality is we're in this mess and a pithy rebate isn't going to do anything long term.
PS: What makes Congress think that extending the Bush tax cuts now will suddenly cause Employer's to put more money into paychecks now when it hasn't worked to date. How is that a solution for anyone but the rich?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:46 PM on 01/22/2008

I actually feel sorry for Ben Bernanke and will not make anymore ass-cerbic accusations against him. I hope he has time to tell his bosses that band-aid fixes will not address STRUCTURAL problems inherent to the smoke and mirror basis of derivatives. I hope he also recommends we close the Federal reserve and do away with the CIA. But Ben is probably destined to be the sacrificial lamb at the alter of Greenscam who is the PAROCLETE OF MAMMON-OGRAPHY. But unless Ben starts working for we the people his will be just another ass-hat accomplice.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:38 PM on 01/22/2008

Let's hope that everybody involved with Duhyba's plan remembers:

1) that his economic savy has plunged this country into this crisis
2) that his economic savy plunged Texas, while he was govenor, deeply into the red
3) that his economic savy with Harkins Savings, his company, became the poster child of the late 1970's economic bust, in Texas

Whatever he recomends, do the opposite.

4) He is a proven serial liar, who always has cheaded the middle class and poor and has always deliverd to the rich. whatever he promises, for the middle class and small business. he will deliver to the wealthy.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 PM on 01/22/2008

So the Fed lowers interest rates, inflation increases, the dollar hits a new low against foreign currencies, gasoline goes to $5 a gallon, and there's a real depression. Hold on to your hats, folks. And remember, J Paul Getty made his money buying stock at the bottom.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 01/22/2008

to have tax cuts after tax cuts is not a plan.

do you think that the gated communities will shelter the recipients of the administrations largess from shame when people line up for soup?

d

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:01 PM on 01/22/2008

From the article: "I just wonder how many people, when they got subprime mortgages, knew what they were getting into," Bush said."
--------------------------------------------

No one. These people weren't even aware they were purchasing negative amortization loans.(Duh).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:53 PM on 01/22/2008
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