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To: TwoToTango who wrote (125184)5/16/1999 3:16:00 PM
From: Ian Davidson  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 176387
 
Rubin Speaks:



Sunday May 16, 2:15 pm Eastern Time

Rubin: US inflation will stay low despite CPI jump

WASHINGTON, May 16 (Reuters) - Outgoing Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin said on
Sunday he expected the U.S. economy to experience low inflation and solid growth in the
coming months, but he warned it was risky for the world to rely on it as the only engine of
economic growth.

Rubin, in an interview with ABC television, was questioned about whether the unexpectedly
high jump in the Consumer Price Index for April meant the robust U.S. economy was
threatened by higher inflation.

''As you look forward, the most likely scenario remains one of solid growth and low inflation,'' said Rubin, who announced his
resignation last week.


Financial markets tumbled on Friday after the Labor Department said its CPI, the main inflation gauge of the economy, had
increased by 0.7 percent last month, the biggest monthly rise since October 1990 just before the Gulf War.

Rubin said despite the good prospects for the U.S. economy, the global economy faced a number of challenges and was still
suffering from the effects of the financial crisis that erupted in 1997.

''We need to continue ... to work around the world to promote growth. We have at the moment an unhealthy situation in the
world economy in that the United States is really the only major part of the global economy with robust growth,'' he said.

''Most particularly, it is critically important that Japan get back on track,'' he added.

The United States has complained repeatedly that Japan has failed to revive its economy and this has in turn exacerbated the
economic downturn suffered in Asia.

Rubin, who will be succeeded in July by his deputy, Lawrence Summers, said the sound U.S. economy could be preserved by
saving budget surpluses for bolstering the Social Security system rather than using them up through tax cuts.