Monday
May182009
Navigating through the Road Bumps in the Financial System
By Courtney Ann Jackson-Talk Radio News Service
We can’t let things go back to the way they were with the United States Financial System according to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Monday. Geithner joined Newsweek Magazine editor, Jon Meacham, at a luncheon interview on the topic of the recession and what American’s should expect as the steps to recovery continue to be put into action.
“This is still the most challenging economic crisis that this country has seen in generations. It took a long time for these problems to build up," Geithner said. "It’s going to take time for us to work through them. We’re not going to have a steady, even process of repair, it’s going to be bumpy, still feel fragile for a while.”
Geithner expressed his sympathy for struggling Americans and said he understands why Americans are angry. He said that even as growth inevitably begins to turn positive, unemployment will continue to increase for awhile. He also said, “It’s not going to feel better for a long time for millions of Americans.”
As the administration continues to work its way through this economic crisis, Geithner believes they need to take a “fresh look” at the financial system as a whole. In terms of speed and quality of initiative that are already in progress, he said he thinks the administration is doing well.
“The American people want to see us moving to change things, not just waiting and hoping,” he said.
Meacham asked Geithner about people’s critique that the administration was being too lenient. Geither replied, “I actually think that what the President has put in place is the most aggressive approach to solving a financial crisis than we’ve seen from any serious country in a very long period of time.”
He also noted that they are doing more preventative work and referred to it as a type of insurance from a greater recession. They are working to make the system more stable and plan to release a new set of proposals in the next few weeks for reforming the oversight framework.
We can’t let things go back to the way they were with the United States Financial System according to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner Monday. Geithner joined Newsweek Magazine editor, Jon Meacham, at a luncheon interview on the topic of the recession and what American’s should expect as the steps to recovery continue to be put into action.
“This is still the most challenging economic crisis that this country has seen in generations. It took a long time for these problems to build up," Geithner said. "It’s going to take time for us to work through them. We’re not going to have a steady, even process of repair, it’s going to be bumpy, still feel fragile for a while.”
Geithner expressed his sympathy for struggling Americans and said he understands why Americans are angry. He said that even as growth inevitably begins to turn positive, unemployment will continue to increase for awhile. He also said, “It’s not going to feel better for a long time for millions of Americans.”
As the administration continues to work its way through this economic crisis, Geithner believes they need to take a “fresh look” at the financial system as a whole. In terms of speed and quality of initiative that are already in progress, he said he thinks the administration is doing well.
“The American people want to see us moving to change things, not just waiting and hoping,” he said.
Meacham asked Geithner about people’s critique that the administration was being too lenient. Geither replied, “I actually think that what the President has put in place is the most aggressive approach to solving a financial crisis than we’ve seen from any serious country in a very long period of time.”
He also noted that they are doing more preventative work and referred to it as a type of insurance from a greater recession. They are working to make the system more stable and plan to release a new set of proposals in the next few weeks for reforming the oversight framework.
Obama Invokes Teddy, Pushes Congress To Pursue Fairness
By Adrianna McGinley
President Obama called on Congress Tuesday to channel the policies of former President Theodore Roosevelt to bring the country out of recession and keep the “American dream” alive for middle-class Americans.
“At the turn of the last century, when a nation of farmers was transitioning to become the world’s industrial giant, we had to decide: would we settle for a country where most of the new railroads and factories were controlled by a few giant monopolies that kept prices high and wages low? Would we allow our citizens and even our children to work ungodly hours in conditions that were unsafe and unsanitary? Would we restrict education to the privileged few? Because some people thought massive inequality and exploitation was just the price of progress,” Obama said during remarks in Osawatomie, Kansas. “Theodore Roosevelt disagreed.”
“He believed then what we know is true today, that the free market is the greatest force for economic progress in human history,” Obama added. “But Roosevelt also knew that the free market has never been a free license to take whatever you want from whoever you can.”
Obama said Roosevelt was called a radical, socialist and communist for his progressive ideas, but reminded his audience that those ideas were what eventually brought the country out of depression. According to Obama, Roosevelt faced the same skepticism that exists today from “a certain crowd in Washington” who claim the market would “take care of everything…if only we cut more regulations and cut more taxes.”
These critics, Obama said, praise the “trickle-down” theory; a theory he believes lacks what the country needs.
“It’s never worked,” he said. “It didn’t work when it was tried in the decade before the Great Depression. It’s not what led to the incredible post-war boom of the 50s and 60s.”
Obama said that a child born into poverty in the years following World War II had a 50 percent chance of reaching the middle class and in 1980 their chance dropped to 40 percent. Today, he said, their chance has fallen to just one in three.
“The idea that those children might not have a chance to climb out of that situation and back into the middle class, no matter how hard they work? That’s inexcusable. It’s wrong. It flies in the face of everything we stand for,” Obama said.
“This isn’t just another political debate. This is the defining issue of our time. This is a make or break moment for the middle class, and all those who are fighting to get into the middle class.”
Obama called on Congress to pass comprehensive, long-term tax reform, consumer protection measures and support for higher education to bring the U.S. back to prosperity.
“In this economy, a higher education is the surest route to the middle class… We shouldn’t be making it harder to afford college, we should be a country where everyone has the chance to go.”
Obama pushed for an extension of the payroll tax and unemployment benefits to aid struggling middle class families immediately but said “we have to rethink our tax system more fundamentally” in the long term.
“We have to ask ourselves: Do we want to make the investments we need in things like education, and research, and high-tech manufacturing? Or do we want to keep in place the tax breaks for the wealthiest Americans in our country? Because we can’t afford to do both. That’s not politics. That’s just math,” Obama said.
The president called out Republicans for continuing to defend the Bush-era tax cuts and criticized his conservative colleagues for refusing to ask millionaires to return to Clinton-era tax rates.
When Clinton proposed tax increases on wealthy Americans, Obama said, there were fears it would “kill jobs and lead to another recession” but instead, nearly 23 million jobs were created and the deficit was eliminated.
“I’m here to reaffirm my deep conviction that we are greater together than we are on our own,” Obama said. “I believe that this country succeeds when everyone gets a fair shot, when everyone does their fair share, and when everyone plays by the same rules. Those aren’t Democratic or Republican values; 1 percent values or 99 percent values. They’re American values, and we have to reclaim them.”