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Non-Tech : The ENRON Scandal

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To: Mephisto who wrote (4583)10/7/2002 7:46:14 PM
From: Mephisto   of 5185
 

Aid for a Flagging Economy


"The Bush administration and the House are proposing to boost spending on
homeland security but cut spending on higher education, job training, public housing,
community health centers and child care. It is social spending, however,that
most quickly alleviates the worst effects of an economic slowdown and stimulates
the economy."


October 7, 2002

latimes.com
E-mail story

EDITORIAL

Here's the war report from home: Consumers have
been in the trenches battling a double-dip recession
with their own spending, but they may be starting to
lose the struggle. Congress is caught up in the White
House's obsession with Saddam Hussein, and neither
the administration nor lawmakers are doing anything
significant to battle the slump.


Far from being isolated from the economy, a war
with Iraq is linked to it. The prospect of war is
increasing business and investor uncertainty. The
Congressional Budget Office estimates that war
could cost the U.S. as much as $9 billion a month.
Oil prices could shoot up as well. The cost of
reconstructing Iraq is unclear, but would be
significant.
Partly because of the threat of war, the
U.S., Japanese and European economies are seeing
a contraction in manufacturing demand. Businesses
are taking a wait-and-see stance.

The economic numbers are so anemic that normally they would be impossible to
ignore. Last year, the number of Americans living in poverty increased from 31.6
million to 32.9 million. Median household income declined 2.2%. The ranks of the
uninsured increased by 1.4 million, to 41.2 million. Car sales are slumping despite
continued loan rate-cutting, and retailers are anticipating a dismal Christmas.

Congress and the Bush administration should take more steps to increase
confidence in the economy and to stimulate it, beginning with the corporate
reforms that have somehow evaporated. The Bush administration has failed to
back legislation requiring companies to report stock options as expenses, for
example.
Legislation to make 401(k) pension investments more worker-friendly is
stuck in Congress; tough restrictions on offshore tax havens have gone nowhere.
A handcuffed Andrew S. Fastow, former chief financial officer of Enron, doing
the perp walk Wednesday makes a good photo op but doesn't fool investors.

Nor has Congress put its own financial house in order. It keeps passing stopgap
measures to avoid a government shutdown, but it hasn't approved any of 13
required spending bills. It's also the case that in the next five months, about 3
million workers and their families risk losing unemployment benefits unless
Congress extends a temporary program providing extra weeks of benefits.

The Bush administration and the House are proposing to boost spending on
homeland security but cut spending on higher education, job training, public
housing, community health centers and child care. It is social spending, however,
that most quickly alleviates the worst effects of an economic slowdown and
stimulates the economy.


The White House and lawmakers need to give consumers some ammunition to
fight against an economic downturn. Otherwise, all they'll be waving is a white
flag.

latimes.com
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