Bush Speaks On The Financial Crisis

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BEN FELLER | November 13, 2008 08:09 PM EST | AP

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President George W. Bush speaks at the Manhattan Institute, addressing financial markets and the world economy, Thursday, Nov. 13, 2008, at Federal Hall in New York. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

NEW YORK — President George W. Bush fervently defended U.S.-style free enterprise Thursday as the cure for the world's financial chaos, not the cause. He warned foreign leaders ahead of a weekend summit not to crush global growth with restrictive new rules.

"We must recognize that government intervention is not a cure-all," Bush said from Wall Street, setting his own tone for the two-day meeting that begins Friday in Washington seeking solutions to the economic crisis that has spread around the world.

"Our aim should not be more government," he told the business executives. "It should be smarter government."

The president acknowledged that governments share the blame for the severe economic troubles that have hit banks, homes and whole countries.

He spelled out his prescription, which includes tougher accounting rules and more modern international financial institutions. But he stopped short of the tighter oversight and regulation that European leaders want. All his ideas came with a warning: Don't disturb capitalism.

"In the wake of the financial crisis, voices from the left and right are equating the free enterprise system with greed, exploitation and failure," Bush said.

"It is true that this crisis included failures, by leaders and borrowers, by financial firms, by governments and independent regulators," Bush said. "But the crisis was not a failure of the free market system. And the answer is not to try to reinvent that system."

That warning about the dangers of too much government intervention came not long after he championed the biggest bailout in U.S. history: a $700 billion taxpayer-funded plan to rescue the financial industry. His government has also signed off on costly rescues for housing, insurance and other financial institutions.

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The U.S. wields enormous clout in any global response to the economic crisis, and Bush is host for the weekend gathering, bringing together heads of state from the world's biggest economies as well as emerging nations. It is intended to be the first in a series.

But Bush's personal influence is waning.

In about two months, Democrat Barack Obama will take over as president. Though the president-elect does not plan to attend this summit, he has authorized former Iowa Rep. Jim Leach and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright to represent him. Obama's transition team says they will primarily be listeners on the periphery of the meetings.

The world leaders come to Washington with their own ideas for change. French President Nicolas Sarkozy, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and others are advocating a broader overhaul of financial regulations than Bush wants. The Europeans also want a pledge for concrete changes in just 100 days.

The stated goal for this weekend is to examine the causes of the crisis and begin mapping out principles for a response.

But Britain's Brown, on his way to the summit, declared, "There is a need for urgency."

It was fitting that Bush's argument against regulatory overreach was delivered not in Washington but on Wall Street. His speech venue was venerable Federal Hall, home to the first Congress and within shouting distance of the New York Stock Exchange.

There was freshly sobering news on the U.S. economy: The number of newly laid-off people seeking unemployment benefits jumped to a level not seen since just after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. Still the Dow Jones industrial average surged 553 points at the end of the trading day.

Some of Bush's admonitions raised questions about his own past actions, including last month's big bailout law.

Also, he is one of those voices from the right who railed about greed, saying in an unguarded moment in July that Wall Street "got drunk and now it's got a hangover."

On Thursday, he defended his administration against charges from some leaders that insufficient oversight and regulation in the U.S. contributed to _ even caused _ the mess by failing to raise alarms. Obama is among those who say no one was minding the people's business as the housing market plunged, credit markets ground to a halt and the broader financial system went into distress.

White House aides play down Bush's differences with other nations, saying the leaders have much in common, as evidenced by the gathering itself.

Bush's list of possible areas for agreement include:

_Bolstering accounting rules for stocks, bonds and other investments so investors have a clearer sense of the true value of what they buy.

_Requiring "credit default swaps" _ a type of corporate debt insurance _ to be processed through a central clearinghouse. That would help provide crucial information on the parties involved in these complex, unregulated products.

_Taking a fresh look at rules aimed at preventing fraud and manipulation in trading of stocks and other securities.

_Better coordinating financial regulations among countries.

_Giving more countries voting power at the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

Besides the United States, the countries represented at the White House dinner Friday and meetings on Saturday will be Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey. Those countries and the European Union make up the so-called G-20.

Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd said before he left for Washington that he would raise with fellow leaders his view that a system in which executives of financial firms are rewarded for maximizing risk "cannot be sustained." He said, "That's just dumb, it's wrong and it's bad."

Trade union leaders from participating countries planned to join AFL-CIO leaders Friday in meetings with several foreign heads of state, including Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, and with IMF Managing Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn and World Bank President Robert Zoellick.

The labor leaders are calling for re-regulation of global financial markets, an internationally coordinated fiscal stimulus and balanced economic growth to address income inequality.

___

AP writers Jeannine Aversa and Jim Kuhnhenn contributed to this story from Washington.

NEW YORK — President George W. Bush fervently defended U.S.-style free enterprise Thursday as the cure for the world's financial chaos, not the cause. He warned foreign leaders ahead of a weeken...
NEW YORK — President George W. Bush fervently defended U.S.-style free enterprise Thursday as the cure for the world's financial chaos, not the cause. He warned foreign leaders ahead of a weeken...
 
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WOW! Bush has a BIG EGO.
He spent all this energy just to talk about himself!

Talk about negative attention!

HEHE! BUSH IS THE ECONOMIC PROBLEM!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:03 AM on 11/17/2008

Don't tell us what to do, W, yo had 8 years and we saw what you did. Thanks for your advice, turn around and I'll stick it for you in a safe place

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 PM on 11/14/2008
- PT6 I'm a Fan of PT6 permalink

Bush's plan is simply to use this CRISIS to build MEGA BANKS like we have never seen before!

We are headed toward more control by the RICHEST people in the World!

The BUSH GANG is creating "CORPORATE RULERS of the WORLD!"

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:52 PM on 11/14/2008

Another witty statement by a guy who is auditioning for future employment after January 20th as Bozo the Clown. In my opinion he has that job in the bag.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:46 PM on 11/14/2008
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Does anybody actually listens to Bush? His credibiity is gone already.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:20 PM on 11/14/2008

Could someone shut him up already!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:17 PM on 11/14/2008
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Idiot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:03 PM on 11/14/2008

He just doesn't get it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:49 PM on 11/14/2008
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"Guns don't kill people. People kill people."

"Free trade doesn't kill people. People in control of the free trade kill people".

UH oh.........he just declared his guilt.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:29 PM on 11/14/2008

As usual, Bush's utterances are at best a random combinations of phonemes.

We must distinguish between a well-regulated market in which the players are free...

and a lawless market in which the players are regulated...

or worse, in which the strongest players effectively set the rules.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:19 PM on 11/14/2008

It is darn scary to think this clown was elected twice.
He can not be serious, this fiasco was caused by 2 things (1) GREED (2) NO REGULATIONS.
Good grief, is it time for him to leave yet?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:15 PM on 11/14/2008
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Anyone who has read Naomi Klein's "The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism," will likely come to the conclusion [unless you're Friedmanite Fundamentalist] that Free Market Fundamentalism is the primary culprit for many ills in our current world. From the 1970s through the current day, Milton Friedman's disciples have been welcomed into positions of economic power around the world, forever in search of that perfect "blank page" of a nation's economy that they can finally transform into the perfect self-regulating, distortion free market.

They haven't found one yet...which leads many of us to conclude that free market fundamentalism is a completely discredited approach to economics. Every nation that has been the recipient of free makret "shock therapy" has undergone severe hardships, recessions, and in some instances full-blown depressions.

Also, Free Market Fundamentalism doesn't play well with Democracy.

Friedman's "Chicago Boys" discovered early on that it's much easier to implement economic changes that the majority of a nation's citizens DO NOT WANT if there's an oppressive dictator in charge.

To me, Bush's statement concerning free markets holds about as much water as his statements about the war in Iraq: on these subjects, the truth is not in him.

This ideological battle has come to the forefront in a time when everyone is tired of ideological stand-offs. But we ignore the seriousness of the negative effects of this failed approach to economics not only at our on peril, but at the peril of all nations.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:00 PM on 11/14/2008
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Bush as an economic expert is like Paris Hilton as an anthropologist.

That said, I'm struck by the fact that conservative "free market" theorists, who generally have a very pessimistic view of human nature, never saw this crisis coming. After all, they belive that humans are little bundles of rapacious selfishness, and that it's the genius of the market to make these urges constructive.

But they seem to never have thought that these same urges have a dark side, an irresponsible side, a potentially criminal side.

Maybe they were so dazzled by the money tsunami that they never thought about that? Ya think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:10 AM on 11/14/2008


They didn't anticipate the most likely of human evils.... Human greed.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 11/14/2008

That's right dubya, after the highly successful free market 'we need help' gets all the treasury money and fails to correct things it will prove that socialism doesn't work.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:43 AM on 11/14/2008
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" BOVINE SCATOLOGY..."

"Will there be one nation left that respects us, when your back on your ranch in Texas...?"

Tom Pacheco...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:47 AM on 11/14/2008
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