Economy Still Troubles Vast Majority Of Americans: AP Poll

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JIM KUHNHENN | 09/14/09 04:12 PM | AP

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FILE - In this Sept. 16, 2008 file photo, people work inside the Lehman Brothers headquarters in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, FILE)

WASHINGTON — One year after Wall Street teetered on the brink of collapse, seven out of 10 Americans lack confidence the federal government has taken safeguards to prevent another financial industry meltdown, according to a new Associated Press-GfK poll.

Even more – 80 percent – rate the condition of the economy as poor and a majority worry about their own ability to make ends meet. The pessimistic outlook sets the stage for President Barack Obama as he attempts to portray the financial sector as increasingly confident and stable and presses Congress to act on new banking regulations.

The public sentiment also poses a challenge to central elements of Obama's governing agenda. Half of those surveyed said deficit reduction should be a national priority over increased spending on health care, education or alternative energy.

"I know a lot of people who don't have health care and really can't afford it," said Judy Purkey, a 57-year-old grandmother from Morristown, Tenn., who has raised four grandchildren and is living on disability payments. But she added: "The economy is so bad. You've heard the expression getting blood out of a turnip? – Well, that's what's going on."

The president, in a CBS interview that aired Sunday on "60 Minutes," acknowledged the public's quandary.

"This is a very difficult economic environment. People are feeling anxious," he said. "And I think it is absolutely fair to say that people started feeling some sticker shock."

Still, Obama generally avoided public blame for the recession or the condition of the banking sector.

Only one out of five surveyed said Obama bore responsibility for the recession; 54 percent blamed former President George W. Bush and 19 percent blamed former President Bill Clinton.

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Financial institutions, however, bore the brunt of the criticism – 79 percent of those surveyed said banks and lenders that made risky loans deserve quite a bit of the blame. Sixty-eight percent held the federal government responsible for not adequately regulating banks and 65 percent blamed borrowers who could not afford to repay loans.

In a glimmer of good news for the administration, 17 percent of those surveyed said the government's massive economic stimulus has improved the economy, a 10 percentage point increase over July. Nearly six out of 10, however, said they are not confident that $787 billion that Congress approved to lower taxes and inject spending into the economy will do any good.

The White House has been promoting the stimulus package as a job creator and job saver that has helped keep unemployment from rising above its current 9.7 percent level – the highest since 1983.

Michael Painter, a 38-year-old unemployed plumber from Orlando, Fla., said that while he believed that spending package would ultimately stimulate the economy, it had yet to help him or his laid-off wife and teenage daughter.

He said he approved of Obama's job performance so far, but not Congress'. "The people in Congress need to quit bickering about party issues and start worrying about people issues."

The Obama administration also has begun to portray the financial sector in more upbeat terms, eager to make the case that government interventions begun under then-President Bush and continued, altered or expanded under Obama have brought stability to the markets.

Obama plans to deliver a speech Monday – the anniversary of Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy – to outline the administration's achievements and press Congress to enact changes in bank regulations.

But the AP-GfK poll illustrates the difficulty he faces.

More Americans worry about facing big, unexpected medical expenses now than they did in July – up 7 percentage points to 68 percent among those polled. Likewise, more worry that the value of their stocks and retirement investments will drop – up 4 percentage points from July to 68 percent.

In October, then-President Bush pushed a $700 billion financial rescue package through Congress on the condition that only half could be spent without further congressional authority. Obama, upon becoming president in January, succeeded in getting the second amount released, despite growing apprehension among lawmakers about the wisdom of such a bailout.

Obama has repeatedly said that the rescue of the financial sector would be incomplete without a new regulatory regime that would prevent a recurrence of the crisis. Obama has sent the outlines of possible regulation to Congress. Key banking lawmakers in the House and Senate have promised Obama legislation by the end of the year, but there is vigorous debate over key elements of Obama's plan, including a new consumer finance protection agency and the designation of the Federal Reserve as the main overseer of large institutions that could pose risks to the system.

The survey of 1,001 adults with cell and landline telephones was conducted from Sept. 3-8. It had a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 3.1 percentage points.

___

AP Polling Director Trevor Tompson, News Survey Specialist Dennis Junius and writer Ann Sanner contributed to this report.

WASHINGTON — One year after Wall Street teetered on the brink of collapse, seven out of 10 Americans lack confidence the federal government has taken safeguards to prevent another financial indu...
WASHINGTON — One year after Wall Street teetered on the brink of collapse, seven out of 10 Americans lack confidence the federal government has taken safeguards to prevent another financial indu...
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- bluesmann I'm a Fan of bluesmann 76 fans permalink
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The economy troubles most of us and Obama and his Dems want to add a trillion dollar health care bill to the mix..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:30 PM on 09/14/2009

What did you say when Bush spent a trillion dollars running around Iraq looking for WMDs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:55 PM on 09/14/2009
- gd h I'm a Fan of gd h 8 fans permalink
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Over ten years. Let's try to be honest here. And that trillion dollars over ten years adds directly to the bottom lines of small business, and I thought you repugs liked business. Only when you can use them to your own advantage, we Dems know.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:45 PM on 09/14/2009
- bluesmann I'm a Fan of bluesmann 76 fans permalink
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Plenty of us said "no bailouts for ANYONE."...Bush and Obama didn't listen..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:28 PM on 09/14/2009

Now your saying something I agree with, Why bailout corporate America when its them who are exporting all our manufacturing jobs?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:00 PM on 09/14/2009
- bluesmann I'm a Fan of bluesmann 76 fans permalink
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These poll numbers should give the Dems fits as we approach 2010 elections..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:23 PM on 09/14/2009
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Pull all your accounts from the "too big to fail banks". Let one of them fail ! my vote Bank of America.
Then and only then will the others start to act responsibly.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:34 PM on 09/14/2009
- JoeBlough I'm a Fan of JoeBlough 60 fans permalink
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Apparently, America is more concerned with preserving private health insurance companies. At least, that's what Fox News says.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:26 PM on 09/14/2009
- Marlyn I'm a Fan of Marlyn 78 fans permalink
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Jobs? Jobless recovery?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:54 AM on 09/14/2009
- BillyT I'm a Fan of BillyT 3 fans permalink

Of course Americans are pessimistic. MSM keeps drumming that they are pessimistic, AP does polls on the obvious and then sells it as if it's Nobel-Prize worthy discovery, why would they ever pay attention to any sign of good economic news?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:07 AM on 09/14/2009
- kimleehan I'm a Fan of kimleehan 31 fans permalink

Yes Americans are pessimistic about the economy and they have a right to be but their blaming the wrong people for their problems, Democratic Government is not the problem, Corporate America is the problem, Its Corporate America thats exporting the manufacturing jobs out of the country,-- The American labor force is the enemy of Corporate America, Corporate America put the Republican leaders into power creating a mutually beneficial Business/government relationship, Their able to do this by exploiting Americans weaknesses, Their fears and hatreds of big Government, racial, ethnic or religious minorities, liberals, socialists, terrorists, homosexuals, abortions, labor unions, and now health care, They are able to do this with the help of controlled sympathetic media spokespeople and censorship is very common as is rampant cronyism and corruption. National symbols are everywere flags on cars, homes, clothing, Disdain for the recognition of human rights by approving torture, long incarcerations without due process, Yes Americans are pessimistic and they won't be optimistic until they break the backs of corporate America.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 09/14/2009

It all kind of comes together doesn't it? Its not like you made it up, it all happened and is still happening.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:31 PM on 09/14/2009
- MIKEBC I'm a Fan of MIKEBC 26 fans permalink
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These hard times are whats left over from bush, history didn't just begin on 1-09

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 09/14/2009
- bzb I'm a Fan of bzb 235 fans permalink
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The whole country is controlled by the banks.

95% of our lives are controlled by the private sector.
4% is controlled by the government.
1% is controlled by the controls both.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:25 AM on 09/14/2009
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putting the Fed in charge of enforcing standards of conduct on Wall Street would be the ultimate in "fox-in-th­e-henhouse­" stupidity.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 09/14/2009

This ties into the republican gains in house poll. If this one changes by next year, so does the other.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:08 AM on 09/14/2009
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Associated Press-GfK poll.

Politics.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:00 AM on 09/14/2009
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It would be really nice to see this admin at least recognize that it is private business that provides our government with the power-and funds- they have and thus is the most important part of our economy. Without jobs all the feel good give-a-way programs are gone. Without the private sector and the revenue it provides to our beloved federal government there will be no national HC.

Yet, its the same old hate everything-big business, oil companies, drug companies, auto companies, hospitals, insurance companies, energy companies, Doctors and on and on.

How about some policy decisions to help business. Lower the tax and regulatory burden. Encourage them to hire more US workers.

Sadly, that is not part of the plan. There is a war on business in this country. Until every private sector job is nationalized, there will be no relief with the left.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:55 AM on 09/14/2009
- Tazru I'm a Fan of Tazru 64 fans permalink
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Move to Texas with the rest of the Ayn Rand Cult! Don't let the door hit you in the "Job Creator"!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:10 AM on 09/14/2009
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A recent study for the American Enterprise Institute by economists Kevin Hassett and Aparna Mathur examined 72 nations over 22 years and found that "wages are significantly responsive to corporate taxation." In today's global economy, capital migrates across national borders away from high-tax nations to places where tax systems are less punitive. Workers suffer when capital flees, and job and wage growth slow.

Many political leaders have adapted to this reality, which is why the average corporate tax rate across the globe has fallen over the past 25 years to an average of about 30% from 50%. The AEI study finds that, if the U.S. were to cut its 35% corporate tax to the OECD average of 30%, American manufacturing workers would gain nearly a 10% pay raise dividend within five years, which is the equivalent of roughly a $3,500 a year pay boost.

Some on the political left have other ideas for raising wages, such as more and easier unionization, more trade and tariff barriers, or a government takeover of employer health care. But all of these would make the U.S. more like Old Europe, where job growth is far slower than it is here. Now as ever, policies that keep the economy growing and employers hiring will lift wages for everyone.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:50 AM on 09/14/2009
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Big business brought it on themselves with unchecked greed. It's basic physics. Every action has a re-action. Corporate greed, abuse and exploitation after the Industrial Revolution created Marxism. You want to avoid a war on business? Then business shouldn't have fired the first shot.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:20 AM on 09/14/2009
- jde I'm a Fan of jde 49 fans permalink
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Wow. Where does one even start? Are you aware that it was tax cuts and deregulation that got us here in the first place? Are there people out there still doubting that? Or are we trying a revisionist "It's all Obamaz and the Democratses fault" approach. And this war on business... is that like the war on Christmas? And since when did a doctor become a big business? And who's going after the doctors anyway? Or are you just trying to pretend the Democrats are attacking families again?

I understand the need for some to be pro-big business. Some people are stockholders, some others believe that trickle down is bound to start any minute. But you need to look back through history. Greater regulation and higher corporate taxes led to greater prosperity FOR ALL. Don't take my word for it, please. Look it up yourself. Also, try to look at economics from a neutral eye. Sometimes government stimulus is needed to help loosen up the money being hoarded by the private sector. Government is never the long term solution, they are a motivator. And in the end, they need to act as referee.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:46 AM on 09/14/2009
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Obama said the doctors do surgery for the money. And they order extra tests for the profit.

Big government is never the solution.

Our great "spread the wealth" admin will only spread the misery. If this is Obama's recovery I would hate to see how bad his recession could be.

Do you mean deregulation if forcing lenders to loan to people who could never qualify for a home loan in the first place? That was a great program.

Greater regulation and higher corporate tax rates will kill job growth. Period.

http://usconservatives.about.com/od/economytaxes/ht/How_to_Generate_Job_Growth.htm
http://www.businessweek.com/bwdaily/dnflash/content/may2009/db2009054_337394.htm?chan=top+news_top+news+index+-+temp_top+story
http://www.uslaw.com/library/Legal_Commentary/High_State_Taxes_Lead_Big_Budget_Deficits_Low_Job_Growth.php?item=477755

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:49 AM on 09/14/2009
- Purveyor I'm a Fan of Purveyor 3 fans permalink

Another poll?!....yawnnnnn

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:39 AM on 09/14/2009
- jde I'm a Fan of jde 49 fans permalink
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Not just any poll... another AP poll predicting doom and gloom for Teh Obamaz.

Just in case you weren't paying attention to their last one.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:51 AM on 09/14/2009
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