SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Clinton -- doomed & wagging, Japan collapses, Y2K bug, etc -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (86)9/4/1998 3:05:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Fallout will not be pretty.

Electronic Telegraph - London - 09/04/98

By Hugo Gurdon in Washington

ONE of Bill Clinton's most senior Democratic colleagues launched a blistering attack on the President last night, accusing him in the Senate of "disgraceful behaviour" which embarrassed all Americans
abroad and undermined parents' efforts to teach their children right from wrong.

In what analysts said was a "devastating blow" to the President's chances of saving his job, Senator Joseph Lieberman accused Mr Clinton of "premeditated deception" which had inflicted damage on his office, his credibility and his country.

The senator balked at calling for a motion of censure against the President, but said that if the imminent report on suspected presidential abuse of office, being prepared by the independent counsel Kenneth Starr, confirmed Congress's worst fears, resignation or impeachment were the alternatives.

The attack went far further than any Democrat has yet ventured in criticising Mr Clinton and, coming from one of the most senior senators in the party, is expected to trigger a flood of further defections. Two other senior Democratic senators joined Sen Lieberman in criticising the president: Bob Kerrey of Nebraska and Patrick Moynihan of New York.

Sen Lieberman's attack has put Mr Clinton on notice that his party will not stand by a President who has squandered and abused its trust. Robert Novak, one of America's most respected pundits said the
senator had "opened the door" for other Democrats to break ranks with the President.

Sen Lieberman rejected Mr Clinton's contention that his affair with Monica Lewinsky was a private matter. It was conducted, he said, "with an employee in the work place". He said: "Such behaviour is not
just inappropriate, it is immoral. The President has undermined the efforts of millions of American parents who are trying to instill in our children the values of honesty." The speech is the clearest sign
that Democrats are now fleeing the President.

Janet Reno, the Attorney General, who has refused for 18 months to appoint an independent counsel to investigate Mr Clinton's suspected illegal fund-raising last election, has now backed down and begun a
probe into his alleged violations. Senior Republicans have threatened Miss Reno with contempt of Congress proceedings for her seeming partisanship, and in the past week she has begun investigations
into whether Vice President Al Gore and another Clinton aide, Harold Ickes, lied about their fund-raising. Now the President is in her sights for by-passing laws controlling election money raising.

The investigation of Mr Gore may, ironically, help Mr Clinton, for if the President were impeached, the Vice President would be in line to succeed him automatically. Even if they decide Mr Clinton has abused
his office, Congress may not want to get rid of him knowing his potential successor is under investigation for comparable venality.

In a further blow to Mr Clinton, a federal judge who previously tried hard to protect him has threatened to rule that the President is in contempt of court. Judge Susan Webber Wright, who presided over a case
brought by Paula Jones, a former Arkansas state employee, who accused Mr Clinton of sexual harassment, is re-examining the President's sworn denial in that case of an affair with Miss Lewinsky.

Judge Wright wrote that the President's deposition "has been the subject of intense scrutiny in the wake of his public admission that he was 'misleading' with regard to his relationship . . . Although the court has concerns about the nature of the President's Jan 17 deposition testimony given his recent public statements, the court makes no findings at this time regarding whether the President may be in contempt."

Lawyers expressed shock at Judge Wright's evidently angry threat. If she were to rule that the nation's chief executive, who swore to be the supreme law enforcer, has instead traduced the judicial system, it
could prove impossible for the House of Representatives' judiciary committee to avoid holding impeachment hearings.



To: Les H who wrote (86)9/4/1998 11:02:00 PM
From: SOROS  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1151
 
bin: Japan key to world economy's future
8.34 p.m. ET (035 GMT) September 4, 1998

By Martin Crutsinger, Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Japan's ability to pull itself out of a recession is the key to reviving a world economy that was battered severely this week, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin said Friday.

But Rubin said he was not optimistic that high-level talks here with Japan's new finance minister would produce a breakthrough.

"The whole world thinks it is critical that Japan take the steps it needs to take, in banking and fiscal measures, to get back on track,'' Rubin said.

Even as Rubin met with the Japanese official, Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan told an audience that U.S. central bankers are growing more concerned about the global financial crisis' impact on America's economy - and because of that, are now just as likely to cut interest rates as to raise them.

"It is just not credible that the United States can remain an oasis of prosperity unaffected by a world that is experiencing greatly increased stress,'' Greenspan said in a speech at the University of California, Berkeley.

Rubin, speaking to reporters flying with him from Washington, said that as the world's circumstances "become more difficult, it makes it more important that each of us do what we can do in our own countries.''

In a later interview on PBS, Rubin said: "The single most important issue is Japan getting back on track.''

For more than a year, the Clinton administration has viewed Japan as the linchpin to resolving the ever-widening Asian crisis, believing the world's second-largest economy must revive before its neighbors can.

Japan's new prime minister, Keizo Obuchi, took office this summer after the country's worst recession in 50 years had forced his predecessor to resign. While Obuchi pledged to move quickly, the United States and global markets have so far been disappointed.

In an effort to underscore the urgency of a worsening situation, the Clinton administration invited Greenspan to join Rubin for further discussions at a dinner here with Japanese Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa after Greenspan's speech.

Obuchi has announced more tax cuts to spur Japan's economy, but has so far refused to say whether they will be permanent, a key U.S. demand.

The United States has pushed with growing intensity for Japan to act more decisively - a point Rubin said he would make again here - at a time when world financial markets are in turmoil, the Russian economy is in chaos and many nations are plunging into deeper recessions.

Both the San Francisco meeting - and Greenspan's speech - took place after financial markets closed in New York. Capping a wild week on Wall Street, the Dow Jones closed down 42 points, at 7640.25, leaving it down a total of 411 points for the week.

Markets across Latin America also took steep dives Friday, despite a special International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington designed to calm anxious investors there.

Rubin said he did not expect a negative reaction if the San Francisco meeting, which President Clinton earlier in the week had described as "profoundly important,'' did not produce a significant breakthrough.

U.S. officials face a dwindling list of options as the world financial crisis that began a year ago in Asian countries, struck Russia and is now threatening Latin America begins to hit closer to home.

The United States has much riding on the outcome. Although its economy remains strong, many fear the troubles could result in a global recession that would drag down the American economy, which depends in part on selling to customers
overseas.

President Clinton's high job-approval ratings are closely tied to the so-far stellar economy, polls indicate. The government reported Friday the nation's unemployment rate held steady at 4.5 percent, near a 28-year low. But job growth is starting to slow in some industries.

Canada, America's largest trading partner, has seen its growth prospects weaken, and Latin American financial markets from Mexico City to Buenos Aires have
fallen sharply as nervous investors started a rush for the exits.

Canada, Mexico and the rest of Latin America combined buy 40 percent of America's exports.

In an unprecedented effort to calm fears, the IMF called together Latin American officials, who pledged Friday to keep their economies stable and remain on the path of reform.

Skeptics, though, wonder whether words are enough, believing a rapid recovery
in the hardest-hit countries is unlikely.

"These kinds of crises, combined currency and banking crises, often last two to three years at least,'' said Morris Goldstein, a former top IMF economist.

Meanwhile, criticism of the Clinton administration and the IMF is increasing. House Republicans are refusing to approve the administration's request for more money for the fund, saying it would be foolhardy in light of the IMF's dismal track record in heading off financial troubles.

The administration contends the IMF's brand of belt-tightening and austerity measures is the only option for many troubled countries.



To: Les H who wrote (86)9/5/1998 11:22:00 AM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
Associated Press - 09/05/98

SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- The Japanese may not have offered new answers to a deepening global financial crisis, but Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the world's most powerful central bank was growing concerned enough to consider cutting U.S. interest rates.

A meeting Friday between Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin and new Japanese Finance Minister Kiichi Miyazawa had been billed as a showdown. At issue, as President Clinton put it this week, was the need for a ''profoundly important'' discussion about Japan more aggressively shoring up its economy.

The talks, however, essentially covered well-worn territory, both sides said: Japan insisted it was moving as fast as it could to jump-start an economy mired in the worst recession in 50 years; U.S. officials complained that Japan needed to act more boldly to spur growth for its troubled Asian neighbors.

Stealing the show was Greenspan, who joined Rubin and Miyazawa for dinner after a speech in Oakland. Analysts said Greenspan's remarks provided a clear signal the Fed stood ready to cut interest rates to
ensure that the U.S. economy is not dragged into a recession.

''It is just not credible that the United States can remain an oasis of prosperity unaffected by a world that is experiencing greatly increased stress,'' Greenspan said. ''As dislocations abroad mount, feeding back on our financial markets, restraint is likely to intensify.''

Greenspan noted that in the spring and the early summer, Fed policy-makers still were more worried about the risk that inflation could get out of hand and were poised to raise interest rates to slow U.S. growth.

The most recent turmoil has convinced those policy-makers that the risks of inflation and recession had ''become balanced,'' Greenspan said. The Fed would ''need to consider carefully'' the potential threats of the deepening global economic troubles, he added.

Analysts viewed Greenspan's language as a clear indication the Fed's new worry is a U.S. economy slowed too much by Asia. That would represent a change from Greenspan's mid-year report to Congress
just six weeks ago. Then, he indicated that a bigger risk was inflation from too-tight labor markets.

''The comments he made were very significant in terms of signaling a major change in monetary policy,'' said Lynn Reaser, economist with Nationsbank Corp. in Jacksonville, Fla.

David Jones, economist at Aubrey G. Lanston & Co. in New York agreed. But he said it was unlikely the Fed would cut rates at its next interest-rate meeting on Sept. 29. Jones expected the Fed would see
whether U.S. financial markets settle down and how much of a drag a sharply rising trade deficit becomes on the overall economy.

The Fed has not changed interest rate policy since March 1997. Its federal funds rate, the benchmark for millions of Americans' short-term borrowing costs, has remained at 5.5 percent.

Greenspan's comments were likely to provide solace to financial markets disappointed that Miyazawa did not present more concrete details on how the government of new Prime Minister Keizo Obuchi plans
to shore up its shaky banking system and revive the economy.

''It is important for Japan to move,'' Rubin told reporters after the discussions. ''The world needs Japan to get back on track.''

Rubin hoped the talks had provided some momentum to Japan's efforts. He also noted that Clinton and Obuchi will meet in two weeks in New York, apparently in an effort to lay down another marker when the
United States will be judging Japan's commitment to economic reform.

Both the San Francisco meeting -- and Greenspan's speech -- followed a harrowing week for global markets.

Russia's economy appeared to be in a free-fall after a botched devaluation of the ruble and the government's unilateral declaration it was delaying payments on billions of dollars in foreign loans.

That sent investors scurrying for the exits in other emerging markets. Markets across Latin America took steep dives Friday, despite a special International Monetary Fund meeting in Washington of finance
ministers of nine of the largest Latin American economies. The meeting was intended to show the ministers' resolve to withstand the global turmoil.



To: Les H who wrote (86)9/22/1998 2:48:00 PM
From: SOROS  Respond to of 1151
 
By Peter Alan Harper AP Business Writer Tuesday, September 22, 1998; 12:52 a.m. EDT

NEW YORK (AP) -- A leading investment guru and one of labor's biggest leaders are among those warning that the United States is closer to crisis than it thinks and must immediately increase its efforts to solve the global economic crisis.

Robert Hormats, a vice chairman at Goldman, Sachs & Co., said the United States is facing ''probably the biggest threat to prosperity since the oil crisis of the 1970s.''

He and AFL-CIO president John Sweeney spoke Monday at New York University Law School, part of a daylong conference on democracy and the global economy. President Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair addressed a late afternoon session.

Sweeney spoke of being sure to include the world's devastated workers in any solution to global economic problems.

Hormats' remarks came on a day the International Monetary Fund said that global capital markets could face more turbulence if Japan does not resolve its pressing economic problems quickly and if financial difficulties in Asia and Latin America grow worse.

The IMF's annual report on capital markets also said net private capital flows to emerging markets fell dramatically in 1997, the first significant downturn in a decade.

The report did not address problems in Russia, where the government Monday began printing 1.9 billion rubles, or $55 million, in an attempt to resolve central banking problems.

Hormats and Sweeney spoke just hours after Japanese legislators failed to complete a bill resolving its multibillion dollar banking problems, which sent Japanese stocks into a swoon. Japan's main stock index hit a 12-year low.

Should the Japanese banking system fail, ''It would make the Russian crisis look like a picnic,'' Hormats said.

Hormats, who is working to resolve private investment problems in Russia and flew in for the panel, offered solutions:

--The Group of Seven industrialized nations rededicate themselves and work with emerging markets.

--The United States needs to ''help Brazil in every way. If that falls, lots of other problems will occur,'' Hormats said. ''If we abandon them now, those supporting reform will say we did not come in their hour of need.''

--Build community by helping those who need it most -- which also resolves long-term security problems.

''We need to show the softer side of capitalism,'' Hormats said. As an example, he suggested delivering medicine and food to northern Russia, where workers have not been paid for months on end

''They'll remember that. That will be an important contribution,'' Hormats said. ''We will look concerned about these countries and not just be lecturers.''

Sweeney -- chief of a 13 million-member labor federation that signed up 400,000 new members last year -- spoke for the workers.

''Make no mistake about it, the real economy is taking the hit,'' Sweeney said. ''Workers across the world'' are suffering.

Sweeney spoke of workers in South Korea, where 25 people commit suicide a day, an increase of 36 percent since the economic crisis began.

He also spoke of places where children leave school to help support their families.

''The middle class is being pushed back into poverty,'' said Sweeney, who subsequently offered a twist on such popular solutions as lowering interest rates in the United States and getting the Japanese economy stimulated.

The world ''needs new international agencies ... not credit agencies or life rafts'' for the rich, he said, taking a shot at such agencies as the IMF, whose prescriptions include saving banks and cutting employee ranks.

''The president is right. We need not be an oasis of prosperity in a sea of crisis.''