Christina Romer: Fundamentals Of The Economy Are Sound

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PHILIP ELLIOTT | March 15, 2009 06:05 PM EST | AP

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In this photograph provided by "Meet the Press," House Republican Whip Rep. Eric Cantor, R-Va., appears during the taping of "Meet the Press'" Sunday, March 15, 2009, at the NBC studios in Washington. (AP Photo/Meet The Press, Brendan Smialowski)

WASHINGTON — The economy is fundamentally sound despite the temporary "mess" it's in, the White House said Sunday in the kind of upbeat assessment that Barack Obama had mocked as a presidential candidate.

Obama's Democratic allies pleaded for patience with an administration hitting the two-month mark this week, while Republicans said the White House's plans ignore small business and the immediate need to fix what ails the economy. After weeks projecting a dismal outlook on the economy, administration officials _ led by the president himself in recent days _ swung their rhetoric toward optimism in what became Wall Street's best stretch since November.

During the fall campaign, Obama relentlessly criticized his Republican opponent, Sen. John McCain, for declaring, "The fundamentals of our economy are strong." Obama's team painted the veteran senator as out of touch and failing to grasp the challenges facing the country.

But on Sunday, that optimistic message came from economic adviser Christina Romer. When asked during an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" if the fundamentals of the economy were sound, she replied: "Of course they are sound."

"The fundamentals are sound in the sense that the American workers are sound, we have a good capital stock, we have good technology," she said. "We know that _ that temporarily we're in a mess, right? We've seen huge job loss, we've seen very large falls in GDP. So certainly in the short run we're in a _ in a bad situation."

Just a week ago, White House Office of Management and Budget director Peter Orszag declared that "fundamentally, the economy is weak." Days later, Obama told reporters he was confident in the economy.

"If we are keeping focused on all the fundamentally sound aspects of our economy, all the outstanding companies, workers, all the innovation and dynamism in this economy, then we're going to get through this," Obama said, striking a tone that his top aides mimicked.

Despite the new enthusiasm at the White House and on Wall Street, there was little solid evidence to suggest an end was in sight to the severe recession that has already cost 4 million American jobs, driven down home values and sent foreclosures soaring. Meanwhile, Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao said he was concerned about the safety of the estimated $1 trillion his country has invested in U.S. government debt.

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Obama sought to downplay the worries.

"There's a reason why even in the midst of this economic crisis you've seen actual increases in investment flows here into the United States," Obama said Saturday in the Oval Office. "I think it's a recognition that the stability not only of our economic system, but also our political system, is extraordinary."

The seesaw message from the new administration drew sharp criticism from Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell, who said Obama's team was exploiting the economic situation for political gain.

"They're taking advantage of a crisis in order to do things that had nothing to do with getting us into the crisis in the first place," McConnell said.

Democratic lawmakers promoted a potential plan to help move so-called toxic assets off bank ledgers. Rep. Barney Frank, D-Mass., said discussions were under way, but would not be rushed.

"If they wait a week or two more, no one ought to get all in a twitter about that. It's very important to do it right," he said.

Also Sunday, the president's team largely rejected suggestions that officials were considering taxing employees' health benefits. As a candidate Obama had called such a proposal a "multitrillion-dollar tax hike."

"I'm not leaving the door open," said Austan Goolsbee, a senior White House economist with a broad portfolio and a personal friendship with Obama, responding to a report in Sunday's New York Times. "The president has laid out a series of clear principles on the health plan that we will do whatever it takes to get affordable quality coverage to all Americans."

Romer said she wouldn't take the idea off the table, but she added that Obama hasn't supported it. Larry Summers, the president's chief economic adviser, said it wasn't part of Obama's principles but left open the possibility of such a move from Congress, where Democrats control both chambers.

Even so, Obama's political allies are not taking chances. Organizing for America, whose almost 14 million-person e-mail list is drawn from voters who supported Obama last November, plans to mobilize them this week to build grass-roots support for the budget on the Internet and on phone lines.

"We didn't fight to shy away from the tough long-term decisions Washington has ducked for far too long," Obama political adviser David Plouffe wrote this weekend to members of the group, which is overseen by the Democratic National Committee.

Republicans refused to accept Democrats' plans. McConnell said the GOP would work to amend the proposal in the Senate, but not put forward a wholesale plan.

Rep. Eric Cantor, the GOP's No. 2 leader in the House, promised an alternative budget, in part to counter Democratic attacks that his party provided only "no" but not other ideas and in part to help small businesses, whom Cantor said Obama ignores.

In contrast to Cantor's charge, Obama planned to provide billions of dollars in federal lending aid aimed at struggling small business owners.

The broad package of measures to be announced Monday includes $730 million from the stimulus plan that will immediately reduce small-business lending fees and increase the government guarantee on some Small Business Administration loans to 90 percent, according to officials briefed on the plan who demanded anonymity because the announcement had not been made.

McConnell appeared on ABC's "This Week." Summers appeared on ABC and on CBS's "Face the Nation." Romer and Cantor appeared on NBC. Goolsbee and Frank appeared on "Fox News Sunday."

___

Associated Press writer Hope Yen contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — The economy is fundamentally sound despite the temporary "mess" it's in, the White House said Sunday in the kind of upbeat assessment that Barack Obama had mocked as a presidential ...
WASHINGTON — The economy is fundamentally sound despite the temporary "mess" it's in, the White House said Sunday in the kind of upbeat assessment that Barack Obama had mocked as a presidential ...
 
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Sadly, David Gregory and Philip Elliot are hucksters and Christina Romer is not the best interview. You could almost give Elliot a pass on his headline, if you take Romer to be "the White House," because her rambling "Of course..." statement. But she was still aware that Obama was saying something different than McCain. Obama said we need to be "focused on all the fundamentally sound aspects of our economy" then went on to list those aspects. The sentence implies that there may be aspect s of our economy that are not "fundamentally sound." Gregory's tact was embarrassingly disingenuous. And Elliot's flame fanning is intellectually dishonest.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 03/17/2009
- LucieLee I'm a Fan of LucieLee 38 fans permalink
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So now that statement that McCain said six months ago makes him some sort of oracle of economic prudence, now!! This convenient conundrance the media finds itself in, in it's gratuitous 'slam" against Pres. Obama, which has gone from the sublime to ridiculous since the inauguration, shows the ineptitude the media has when it comes to the economy. The very idea that President Obama and some of his advisors on the economy used the same words 'fundamentals" as McCain, and they were describing the same time frame, does nothing but boost McCain to something sacrosanct...it is not very constructive...and the media knows that.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:32 AM on 03/16/2009
- rockyb26 I'm a Fan of rockyb26 131 fans permalink
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David Gregory is a swindler. He tried to back Dr. Romer into saying that the fundamentals are strong. She didn't say that. Neither did president Obama. Both said that the work the administration is doing is aimed at ensuring that the fundamentals are sound. They never said that they are currently strong. I watched the entire interview yesterday, this is just bad journalism all the way around.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:45 AM on 03/16/2009
- Jo I'm a Fan of Jo 4 fans permalink

Actually, David Gregory is worse than a swindler but that's a whole other comment.
The difference between McCain's "the fundamentals of the economy are strong" and Romer's (i.e., the Administration's) "the fundamentals of the economy are strong" is this: McCain meant that all was well and nothing was broken; Romer meant that, even though the economy is currently broken, it can be and is worth fixing.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 PM on 03/16/2009
- mmonarch I'm a Fan of mmonarch 24 fans permalink
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Gregory asked her point blank "are the fundamentals sound". She answered yes. How much more do you people need? Go listen to it over and over again. It's on youtube. For heaven's sake. Your man and his team made a boo-boo. Get over it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:49 PM on 03/31/2009
- jsarets I'm a Fan of jsarets 187 fans permalink

It depends on the definition of "fundamentals".

If it's about potential productive capacity, that aspect of the economy is still sound, although not quite as strong as we were in 1960. But it's kind of academic to tout the productivity of the American workforce in spite of the fact that nobody wants to employ us.

It's hard to argue that the maximal utilization of productive capacity isn't a fundamental aspect of macroeconomics. It's hard to be proud of having the most talented unemployed people. It's hard to be impressed with the incompetence of our rich people.

I think it would be much more accurate to say that the fundamentals of the economy are impeding the strength of the American workforce.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:36 AM on 03/16/2009
- mmonarch I'm a Fan of mmonarch 24 fans permalink
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LOL, like it depends on your definition of "is"?

The word that Obama, his economy lady and McCain really should have used is foundation. Or fundament (though no one would get it). Not fundamental (basic facts or essentials which sounds close) . Foundation implies that the groundwork - the cornerstone is firm. It is a semantic hairline. But one that might have saved Obama some jeers.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:58 PM on 03/31/2009

If you ask me, the argument over whether the fundamentals were "strong" or "sound" is a distinction without a difference. You people are just kidding yourselves if you think that absolves Obama from saying one thing and doing another. Didn't he say he wasn't going to have any lobbyists in his administration and then start writing waivers so he could have lobbyists in his administration? Didn't he say he was all against earmarks and then sign a bill with 9.000 or so earmarks in it the next day? Didn't he rail against Bush's signing statements just before he wrote his own signing statement? How soon will you realize Obama is just another politician who wants you to listen to what he says and ignore what he does?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:57 AM on 03/16/2009
- rockyb26 I'm a Fan of rockyb26 131 fans permalink
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NO

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:55 AM on 03/16/2009
- LucieLee I'm a Fan of LucieLee 38 fans permalink
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Just more RW talking points....that's the distinction without a difference!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:35 AM on 03/16/2009

Obama saying one thing and doing the opposite isn't a "talking point", it's a FACT. He can read a great sounding speech off his teleprompters explaining things away, but only the gullible will believe his denials when the truth is staring you in the face.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:31 AM on 03/16/2009

David Gregory is a simplistic tool.

His opening angle of comparing Obama's Fiscal Policy to John McCain's flailing, stumbling mavericky posturing during the campaign is stupid. Repeating the question ad nauseum? Priceless.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:17 AM on 03/16/2009
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Is this lady the female version of John McCain?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 AM on 03/16/2009
- clarryr I'm a Fan of clarryr 32 fans permalink

You are totally misinterpreting what the President said. He did NOT say the fundamentals of the ecomony are sound". He knows we are in dire economic straits.

What he said is, "If we are keeping focused on all the fundamentally sound aspects of our economy, all the outstanding companies, workers, all the innovation and dynamism in this economy, then we're going to get through this." That is, focus on our strengths as a nation.

You're going to have to learn to parse a sentence properly. President Obama speaks in whole, complex sentences and you need to hear the entire thing. If you take part of the sentence out of context you twist the meaning and create a big to do over a non-issue. Perhaps you did that on purpose.

Two weeks ago the MSM was complaining the President was too glum about the economy. Now he talks about the strengths of the American people to try to boost morale. What is it you want him to say or are you just going to continue to make bad stuff up no matter what he says?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:20 AM on 03/16/2009
- piper1233 I'm a Fan of piper1233 6 fans permalink

No one could have sum it up better than you just did, Kudos!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:50 AM on 03/16/2009
- rockyb26 I'm a Fan of rockyb26 131 fans permalink
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agreed

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:54 AM on 03/16/2009
- sposton I'm a Fan of sposton 209 fans permalink
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The fundamentals are not sound. This financial meltdown was driven by structural trade imbalances caused by globalists free trade nonsense. Without addressing that, the fundamentals are far from sound. Kick starting the economy will just bring another crisis down the road, just sooner.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:00 AM on 03/16/2009
- Tim303 I'm a Fan of Tim303 102 fans permalink
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There's a difference between "sound" and "strong".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:53 PM on 03/15/2009
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romer is nothing more than a lacky for obama - America is screwed - hide and watch

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:57 PM on 03/15/2009
- JaneK13 I'm a Fan of JaneK13 21 fans permalink

Out here (outside of the beltway where the "real" folks live) the fundamentals of our economy stinks!

Wasteful and foolish government spending got us into trouble in the first place.
Now they say that more government spending will solve the problem.
What's wrong with this picture?

The government ought to stop spending the people's money. Back off and let us solve our own problems! The solution is with the people, not with the government. The solution is to leave private businesses alone --government doesn't know how to operate business. They proved that with the mortgage mess that started in Fannie & Freddie.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:44 PM on 03/15/2009
- Tim303 I'm a Fan of Tim303 102 fans permalink
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"We" have no money to solve our problems. In a depression, you spend. Get used to it. Or leave.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:51 PM on 03/15/2009
- livesimply I'm a Fan of livesimply 30 fans permalink
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Yeah. Let the big private corporations do it. They've done such an excellent job. Right?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:28 AM on 03/16/2009
- Girl28 I'm a Fan of Girl28 13 fans permalink

You're an i.d.i.o.t.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 AM on 03/16/2009

OOOHHH no, isn't this the same phrase that did the McCain campaign in?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:43 PM on 03/15/2009
- Tim303 I'm a Fan of Tim303 102 fans permalink
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No. It isn't.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 PM on 03/15/2009
- mmonarch I'm a Fan of mmonarch 24 fans permalink
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This is McCain's phrase, verbatim - "You know that there's been tremendous turmoil in our financial markets and Wall Street. And it is, it's - people are frightened by these events. Our economy, I think, still, the fundamentals of our economy are strong but these are very, very difficult times. And I promise you, we will never put America in this position again. We will clean up Wall Street. We will reform government."

Now gee- that sounds awfully familiar. Why, it's deja vu' all over again. Suck it up people. Obama and his team said the same stuff. Rearrange the words all you want. Sugar coat it. Try the semantics route. They all said the same stinking thing. Let me translate for you in words you can all understand. The FOUNDATION, the BASE of our nation, it's PEOPLE and their hard work ethic, small businesses are still the same. Now let me finish it for Sen. McCain....it is the F-ups in Washington that are the problem. All of them. Both parties. Past President and present. OOOHHH, now I feel better.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 03/31/2009
- mmonarch I'm a Fan of mmonarch 24 fans permalink
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But wait, there's more! After the media crucified him for the comment, he issued this statement - which sounds - by golly - almost exactly like what Roemer and Obama have been saying.

" But let me say something: this economic crisis is not the fault of the American people. Our workers are the most innovative, the hardest working, the best skilled, most productive, most competitive in the world," My opponents may disagree, but those fundamentals of America are strong. No one can match an American worker. Our workers sell more goods to more markets than any other on earth. Our workers have always been the strength of our economy, and they remain the strength of our economy today."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:11 PM on 03/31/2009
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I wonder if the certain will go down on global warming before or after the Great Obama Drepression?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:36 PM on 03/15/2009
- Tim303 I'm a Fan of Tim303 102 fans permalink
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"certain"? No, the CURTAIN will surely not go down. You read about the sea levels on the East Coast today? And you read about the fact that it's the ninth hottest year in a row since 1880?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:52 PM on 03/15/2009
- livesimply I'm a Fan of livesimply 30 fans permalink
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This is not the Obama depression, dear.....and you know it if you have brains.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:29 AM on 03/16/2009
- mmonarch I'm a Fan of mmonarch 24 fans permalink
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LOL, sorry, it is now. At some point in his term, he is going to have to take ownership. He was in Congress when some of the actions of the Democrats brought his on. I know, Bush never vetoed a thing. However, Frank, Dodd, Schumer all have their fingerprints all over this mess. Frank outright LIED to the American public when he said Fannie and Freddie were as good as gold. Wasn't Obama in Congress then? What was he doing, twiddling his thumbs? Planning how he was going to redecorate the Oval Office? So, "dear", all of Congress owns this depression and Obama was one of them. Now go and stick your head back in the sand, "dear".

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:44 AM on 04/01/2009
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Unfortunately this is the bookend to another article out today in the NY Times. Obama is signaling that he is willing to tax employee health benefits -- the exact same thing he mocked McCain for suggesting during the campaign by calling it the "largest middle-class tax increase in American history." Now he says if Congress wants to do it, he won't say no.

Wink, wink.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/15/us/politics/15health.html?hp

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:21 PM on 03/15/2009
- StellaRay I'm a Fan of StellaRay 225 fans permalink

Thanks for the link, Kotexbarbie. Very troubling.

What troubles me the most is that Obama seems unwilling to push for National health care, and instead wants to just plug the leak on rusty old pipes---to try to keep this nation insured through employers, which is a large part of the reason the auto makers are going under. They can't afford to keep the promises they made to their retired workers. Other businesses are sure to follow as the costs continue to escalate.

Even large companies can barely afford the costs as it is and have increased average co-pays to anywhere from 300 to $600 a month. Not to mention that now all the newly unemployed are without insurance because they had only their employers to depend on. And, if you ask any small business owner what keeps them from hiring more people they'll tell you it's the cost of healthcare.

To me it's a matter of our priorities. Is health care a national priority? Do we believe it's a right and not a privilege? Until we come to terms with the answer to that question we cannot move ahead and any solution we come up with will be piecemeal and only save us temporarily from the disaster we're headed towards as the baby boomers age.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:09 PM on 03/15/2009
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You're right. Healthcare is the measure of change. But rather than embrace real change as he promised, it seems more and more that Obama is afraid of it, that he is satisfied with small change. And so we have Sebelius for HHS instead of Howard Dean who believes in Universal Healthcare. Republicans have successfully demonized Universal Healthcare as Socialized Medicine, so I don't have any hope that Obama will want to tarnish himself with that label. If only he would lower the age of Medicare, we can at least try to collapse over the finish line.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 03/15/2009
- livesimply I'm a Fan of livesimply 30 fans permalink
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I think there are just way too many people that cannot afford health care. It's way too expensive. Regardless of the messaging and what the talking heads say, it comes down to if you are able to go to the doctor and pay for it. Period. It will happen because it is the will of the people. Philosophy aside, people need access to health care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:37 AM on 03/16/2009
- livesimply I'm a Fan of livesimply 30 fans permalink
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He won't do it. He's just being Obama which is trying to listen to and look at all sides. It's his way of politicing and it's not so bad.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:31 AM on 03/16/2009
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Do you understand the difference between the two parties? HELLO??????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:54 AM on 03/16/2009
- rockyb26 I'm a Fan of rockyb26 131 fans permalink
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clearly the president is against taxing employee benefits. he spent 2 years on the campaign railing against this. now all of a sudden, just because someone hints that it's possible (when really it isn't) everyone believes it. pathetic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:47 AM on 03/16/2009
- Okieborn I'm a Fan of Okieborn 75 fans permalink

Ms. Romer !!
Which Fundamentals Of The Economy Are You Discussing ???????
Americans are Losing Their Jobs And Homes and Insurance everyday are We Part Of The Fundamentals ????

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:16 PM on 03/15/2009
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