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Strategies & Market Trends : Asia Forum

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To: Bosco who wrote (8649)6/2/1999 1:36:00 PM
From: Ron Bower  Read Replies (2) of 9980
 
If THEY would just pay attention to THE MAN.

Ron

Greenspan mum on U.S. rates, warns on free trade
BOSTON, June 2 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan on Wednesday steered clear of commenting on the outlook for U.S. interest rates, instead repeating his concern over waning U.S. support for free world trade.

In a speech to business leaders in Boston, Greenspan lashed out against a rising tide of protectionism in the United States and criticized the Clinton administration's trade policy as being too confrontational.

His remarks largely mirrored a speech the Fed chairman gave in Dallas in mid-April.

''The United States has been in the forefront of the postwar opening up of international markets, much to our, and the rest of the world's, benefit,'' Greenspan said. ''It would be a great tragedy were that process reversed.''

Greenspan, a fervent free-market advocate, said a massive rise in world competition that growing international trade had brought over the past half century had resulted in ''markedly higher standards of living'' for countries that participated in cross-border trade, particularly the United States.

The central banker harshly criticized the administration's trade policies for being too focused on the goal of job creation rather than overall standards of living. He also said it was too adversarial and noted that trade was not a zero-sum game in which a gain by one player is always to the detriment of the other.

''We try to promote free trade on the mistaken ground that it will create jobs. The reason should be that it enhances standards of living through the effects of competition on productivity,'' Greenspan said.

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