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Politics : Sioux Nation -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Rock_nj who wrote (162561)3/8/2009 7:44:43 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361830
 
Good points...Obama needs to FOCUS on the economy like a laser beam...IMO, we need a manhatten style project to re-invent our economy for this next century...Obama must do everything possible to stabilize the financial system and jumpstart the economy -- nothing else will matter unless that happens...IMO, Larry Summers is too close to the Hedge Fund business and in a way was connected with the current problems if you look at some of the things he advocated during the Clinton years...And Tim Geithner is way too close to Wall Street (and very close to the Lehman failure and the troubled AIG bailout)...Why doesn't Obama have the courage to bring totally new thinkers in to run economic policy and treasury..?? Really shake things up...Wouldn't it be refreshing to have someone like Nouriel Roubini running economic policy...and what about Nobel Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz as Treasury Secretary...?? And Paul Volcker needs more input -- sadly I feel Summers has sorta crowded him out.

So far I am NOT pleased with what the Obama finance team has done...I hope we see some serious improvement very soon.

"We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them." ~Albert Einstein



To: Rock_nj who wrote (162561)3/8/2009 9:18:03 PM
From: stockman_scott  Respond to of 361830
 
Obama Nominates Three for Assistant Treasury Secretary Posts

By Edwin Chen

March 8 (Bloomberg) -- President Barack Obama will make nominations for three assistant secretaries of the Treasury, where Secretary Timothy Geithner’s efforts to revive the economy have been hampered by vacancies in key posts.

Alan Krueger is the choice for economic policy, the White House said in a statement. David Cohen will be assistant secretary for terrorist financing and Kim Wallace for legislative affairs. Each currently serves as counselor to Geithner.

“With the leadership of these accomplished individuals and our whole economic team, I am absolutely confident that we will turn around this economy and seize this opportunity to secure a more prosperous future,” Obama said in a statement released by the White House.

The nominations still leave Geithner without any Senate- confirmed staff at the most senior levels of deputy and undersecretary as he tries to flesh out plans to remove bad loans from banks’ balance sheets. Geithner’s effort to staff his department received a new blow last week with the withdrawals of two potential nominees.

Former U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission member Annette Nazareth took herself out of the running to be Geithner’s deputy after concern about public scrutiny over her SEC work and frustration at the length of the selection process. International Monetary Fund official Caroline Atkinson pulled out of consideration for the Treasury’s top international job.

Princeton Professor

Krueger, the nominee for economic policy, is a professor of economics and public affairs at Princeton University. He previously served as chief economist at the Labor Department.

Cohen until recently was a partner in the Washington law firm WilmerHale, where he focused on complex civil litigation, white-collar criminal defense and anti-money laundering counseling. He previously worked in Treasury as acting deputy general counsel and associate deputy general counsel.

Wallace was a managing director at Barclays Capital and head of its Washington Research Group. Before that he was a managing director at Lehman Brothers Inc. Wallace also worked as a legislative aide specializing in fiscal policy for then-Senate Majority Leader George Mitchell and as an analyst on the Senate Budget Committee.

Geithner has brought in some high-level aides to work in posts that don’t require Senate confirmation, including Gene Sperling, a former head of the White House National Economic Council under Clinton, and Lee Sachs, a former Clinton Treasury official. During the administrations of Clinton and George W. Bush, some top Treasury positions went unfilled for months.

The Treasury is aiming to publish more details on its $1 trillion plan to remove distressed mortgage assets from banks’ balance sheets within the next two weeks. Obama has also ordered his economy team to help form legislation to overhaul U.S. financial rules within weeks.

To contact the reporter on this story: Edwin Chen in Washington at EChen32@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: March 8, 2009 06:00 EDT



To: Rock_nj who wrote (162561)3/8/2009 9:56:41 PM
From: stockman_scott  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361830
 
Centrists fear that the president's budget reveals his liberal leanings...

nationaljournal.com



To: Rock_nj who wrote (162561)3/9/2009 1:54:16 AM
From: stockman_scott1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 361830
 
Behind the Curve
_______________________________________________________________

By Paul Krugman
Op-Ed Columnist
The New York Times
March 9, 2009

President Obama’s plan to stimulate the economy was “massive,” “giant,” “enormous.” So the American people were told, especially by TV news, during the run-up to the stimulus vote. Watching the news, you might have thought that the only question was whether the plan was too big, too ambitious.

Yet many economists, myself included, actually argued that the plan was too small and too cautious. The latest data confirm those worries — and suggest that the Obama administration’s economic policies are already falling behind the curve.

To see how bad the numbers are, consider this: The administration’s budget proposals, released less than two weeks ago, assumed an average unemployment rate of 8.1 percent for the whole of this year. In reality, unemployment hit that level in February — and it’s rising fast.

Employment has already fallen more in this recession than in the 1981-82 slump, considered the worst since the Great Depression. As a result, Mr. Obama’s promise that his plan will create or save 3.5 million jobs by the end of 2010 looks underwhelming, to say the least. It’s a credible promise — his economists used solidly mainstream estimates of the impacts of tax and spending policies. But 3.5 million jobs almost two years from now isn’t enough in the face of an economy that has already lost 4.4 million jobs, and is losing 600,000 more each month.

There are now three big questions about economic policy. First, does the administration realize that it isn’t doing enough? Second, is it prepared to do more? Third, will Congress go along with stronger policies?

On the first two questions, I found Mr. Obama’s latest interview with The Times anything but reassuring.

“Our belief and expectation is that we will get all the pillars in place for recovery this year,” the president declared — a belief and expectation that isn’t backed by any data or model I’m aware of. To be sure, leaders are supposed to sound calm and in control. But in the face of the dismal data, this remark sounded out of touch.

And there was no hint in the interview of readiness to do more.

A real fix for the troubles of the banking system might help make up for the inadequate size of the stimulus plan, so it was good to hear that Mr. Obama spends at least an hour each day with his economic advisors, “talking through how we are approaching the financial markets.” But he went on to dismiss calls for decisive action as coming from “blogs” (actually, they’re coming from many other places, including at least one president of a Federal Reserve bank), and suggested that critics want to “nationalize all the banks” (something nobody is proposing).

As I read it, this dismissal — together with the continuing failure to announce any broad plans for bank restructuring — means that the White House has decided to muddle through on the financial front, relying on economic recovery to rescue the banks rather than the other way around. And with the stimulus plan too small to deliver an economic recovery ... well, you get the picture.

Sooner or later the administration will realize that more must be done. But when it comes back for more money, will Congress go along?

Republicans are now firmly committed to the view that we should do nothing to respond to the economic crisis, except cut taxes — which they always want to do regardless of circumstances. If Mr. Obama comes back for a second round of stimulus, they’ll respond not by being helpful, but by claiming that his policies have failed.

The broader public, by contrast, favors strong action. According to a recent Newsweek poll, a majority of voters supports the stimulus, and, more surprisingly, a plurality believes that additional spending will be necessary. But will that support still be there, say, six months from now?

Also, an overwhelming majority believes that the government is spending too much to help large financial institutions. This suggests that the administration’s money-for-nothing financial policy will eventually deplete its political capital.

So here’s the picture that scares me: It’s September 2009, the unemployment rate has passed 9 percent, and despite the early round of stimulus spending it’s still headed up. Mr. Obama finally concedes that a bigger stimulus is needed.

But he can’t get his new plan through Congress because approval for his economic policies has plummeted, partly because his policies are seen to have failed, partly because job-creation policies are conflated in the public mind with deeply unpopular bank bailouts. And as a result, the recession rages on, unchecked.

O.K., that’s a warning, not a prediction. But economic policy is falling behind the curve, and there’s a real, growing danger that it will never catch up.

Copyright 2009 The New York Times Company