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Obama unveils details of $825bn plan to ease crisis

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Published Date: 25 January 2009
PRESIDENT Obama yesterday laid out more pieces of a US economic plan he said would add 3,000 miles of electrical lines, increase security at 90 ports and double the United States' renewable energy capacity within three years.
It was the latest appeal from the new president for a massive spending bill designed to inject almost a trillion dollars into a flailing US economy and to fulfil campaign pledges. As members of Congress consider a $825bn plan, Obama's White House re
leased a radio and internet address directed at voters who want answers.

"Our economy could fall $1 trillion short of its full capacity, which translates into more than $12,000 in lost income for a family of four. And we could lose a generation of potential, as more young Americans are forced to forgo college dreams or the chance to train for the jobs of the future," Obama said in a five-minute address released yesterday.

"In short, if we do not act boldly and swiftly, a bad situation could become dramatically worse."

Along with the speech, Obama's economic team released a report designed to outline tangible benefits of the plan. Aides said they wanted people to understand what they could expect – more schools, lower electricity bills – if their members of Congress supported the proposed legislation.

The United States lost 2.6 million jobs last year, the most in any single year since the Second World War. Manufacturing is at a 28-year low and Obama's economists say unemployment could top 10% before the recession ends. One in 10 homeowners is at risk of foreclosure and the dollar continues to slide.

That harsh reality has dominated Obama's first days in office and prompted a Saturday meeting of his economic team at the White House during their first weekend in power.

A day earlier, he invited Democratic and Republican leaders to the White House to hear their ideas on the economy, yet Obama didn't share the plan's specifics while they visited.

Many of the goals in the speech and report were familiar from Obama's two-year campaign, like shifting to electronic medical records and investing in preventive health care. Other parts added specifics.

Obama's recovery package aims to:

• Double within three years the amount of energy that could be produced from renewables, an ambitious goal given the 30 years it took to reach current levels. Advisers say that could power six million households;

• Upgrade 10,000 schools and improve learning for five million students;

• Save $2bn a year by making federal buildings energy-efficient;

• Triple the number of undergraduate and graduate fellowships in science.

The plan would spend at least 75% of the total – or more than $600bn – within 18 months, providing a huge infusion of cash to the economy, either through bricks-and-shovels projects favoured by Democrats or tax cuts pushed by Republicans. Either could produce progress that Obama could point to if he needs to justify a second package.

The plan lays a heavy emphasis on infrastructure that crumbled as state budgets contracted. Governors have lobbied Obama to help them patch holes in their budgets, drained by sinking tax revenues and increased need for public assistance like Medicaid and children's health insurance. Obama's plan would increase the federal portion of those programmes so no state would have to cut any of the 20 million children whose eligibility is now at risk. Obama's plan would also provide health cover for 8.5 million Americans who lose their insurance when they either lose or shift jobs.

"It's a plan that will save or create three to four million jobs over the next few years" and recognises "there are millions of Americans trying to find work even as, all around the country, there's so much work to be done," he said.

But he cautioned again against expecting instant results: "No one policy or programme will solve the challenges we face right now, nor will this crisis recede in a short period of time."

Ties between the US, the world's biggest economy, and China, with bulging exports and foreign exchange reserves, showed signs of strain yesterday. China's central bank said US accusations that it was manipulating the yuan currency were misleading, a day after Beijing cautioned incoming secretary of state Hillary Clinton to tread carefully.

The remarks from Su Ning, a vice governor of the People's Bank of China, were the bank's first public reaction to comments from US treasury secretary-designate Timothy Geithner, who said last week that Beijing was manipulating its currency exchange policies to gain an unfair trade advantage.

"These comments are not only out of keeping with the facts, even more so they are misleading in analysing the causes of the financial crisis," Su said of Geithner's comments to the Senate finance committee, according to the official Xinhua news agency.

The exchange suggests a testy start to relations between the Obama administration and Beijing, which may tarnish vows of cooperation in combating the global slowdown and security threats.

China worries that its already slowing exports will be even harder hit by US policies to narrow their trade imbalance. Meanwhile, many US politicians believe the yuan is well undervalued, giving Chinese exporters a big advantage that they blame for US job losses and the trade deficit, which hit a record $256.3bn in 2007.

"The international community is currently working together in actively responding to the financial crisis, and it must avoid exploiting different excuses for renewing or encouraging trade protectionism, because these are of no help in withstanding the financial crisis," Su said.

Su's swipe at Geithner came after China's foreign minister urged Clinton to be careful with sensitive issues that could strain ties.

"The China-US relationship is one of the world's most important bilateral relations." Yang Jiechi told Clinton. Each side should "respect and show consideration for the other's core interests and appropriately handle differences and sensitive issues", he said.

Yang, a former ambassador to Washington, said the two powers should "handle bilateral relations by adhering to a strategic high-point and a long-term perspective".





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  • Last Updated: 24 January 2009 9:19 PM
  • Source: Scotland On Sunday
  • Location: Scotland
  • Related Topics: Barack Obama
 
1

COLINTON.MAINS,

Oakville Ontario 25/01/2009 02:31:00
WITH.OUT.WALL.MART.CHINA.IS.BANKRUPT
2

,

25/01/2009 04:48:00
Comment Removed By Administrator
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3

Carolyn 1,

25/01/2009 14:15:27
Sounds like most if not all of the money and jobs will go to large corporations with unionized labor.
Not one self-employed schmuck or small business.

As for union jobs,.. they are great jobs if you know some one who can get you one.
With a union job you can't be fired, or laid off, the benefits are the best and you can get paid even if you work barely or work poorly.

We all know how efficient these construction projects are- they take years more than expected, always have cost overruns, we always find cash stuffed pockets afterwards.
And when you drive by the project there's only a worker or two on the job site, and they're smoking a butt having a chat. While costing taxpayers kzillions.

The point is, if the bailout money really is going to these projects, we the American people are screwed, and screwed for a long time.
4

Carolyn 1,

25/01/2009 14:21:17
Maybe I'm a skeptic, but it seems like the Democrats are paying off their debt to the Union quite nicely.

I seem to remember, it was not so long ago if not for Union votes, Obama would have lost Nevada to Hillary and lost the race...
I could be wrong about that kerfuffle but I don't think so.
Sandi will know.
5

,

25/01/2009 16:11:39
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
6

Carolyn 1,

25/01/2009 16:46:18
We should all feel bad for Postmark-55 (with a dash after his name not periods) because now that China has locked down the internet, he is experiencing what it's really like to be in China. Not a good thing.
As much as I disagree with him about everything he spouted, I feel bad his voice is now restricted with the rest of the poor Chinese. Hope his passport gets him out in time.


That said, the comment made in #7 I agree with except I don't think Obama would ever have been ready for the job because he has no conviction beyond his own self-importance
7

,

25/01/2009 17:15:52
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8

Sandi,

San Diego 25/01/2009 17:46:08
#6 Carolyn,

Hillary Clinton won the caucuses in Nevada 51%-45%, but because that state weights delegate assignment according to population, with lower populated areas being given more delegates, Obama ended up with 14 delegates to Clinton's 11. The reason Obama ended up "winning" was the really corrupt Democratic primary system and of course, he has no incentive at all to make any changes there. Votes were taken and manipulated to get the result the party "leaders" wanted.
9

Carolyn 1,

25/01/2009 18:12:12
Sandi
Wasn't it Nevada where Obama got all the labor unions together and changed the hours or places of voting or something?? Or was that Arizona? Or both. I know Bill was pissed about the decisions and complained.

Well, in any event, telling Iowa he supported corn, and the manipulation of the union vote at the caucuses resulted in Obama getting the entire election.

He's got BIG dues to pay, and this country is going to pay big time and for a long time
10

Selgovae,

25/01/2009 19:29:33
#7 POSTMARK "but I think that he is far too naive"

Somehow I don't think you get to be president of the USA by being naive. This was the guy whose campaign funds beat all previous records. And mainly from small donations. And his political baptism has been in Illinois. I'd say he is one able guy. Whether that converts to what we want to see is a different matter. But it's interesting for now.
11

Sandi,

San Diego 25/01/2009 19:42:41
#11 Carolyn, don't forget that Obama took his name off the ballot in Michigan as a strategy to get Iowa votes. It worked, too, to the point where The One's supporters still claim that you can't count Michigan votes because his name wasn't on the ballot. You couldn't make this stuff up.

The caucus shenanigans that infuriated Bill Clinton took place at every caucus. The Obama campaign bullied and intimidated caucus-goers. They mis-directed them, lied to them and used any method they could to prevent people from voting for Hillary Clinton. And if anyone complained, they were called "racist". There are many, many law suits pending in Texas, but none of it makes any difference now.
12

SouthernGent,

25/01/2009 19:44:01
#5

We have more people working on construction projects down here than you obviously do. There tends to be 10-12 per area. Of course, only one can work at a time, so the others must be the cheering section.
13

Carolyn 1,

25/01/2009 20:50:29
The People's Republic of Massachusetts has the burden of the "Big Dig" project which may never end, and may never be paid for, and all those with who filled their pockets never prosecuted.
You could look across acres of ripped up land covered with stacks of girders and stuff, the roads blocked off with rows of police and their flashing lights directing traffic so cars have to crawl at a minute an hour while we sit in awe as one lone crane moves a chunk of steel or something.
They just raised our gas tax to pay for these roads which we supposedly already paid for with increased 2% in state income taxes five years ago. It never ends.
So I guess our cheering section is the dozen of police cars. Do you know they get $38. a hour to park beside every construction site- and it's a law!!

The LAST thing this state's taxpayers can afford is 'infrastructure' built by leftie unions, especially if it's from the Federal government printing press.
14

Lynne,

25/01/2009 22:16:29
I just sent my Representatives an e-mail... this is full of pork.. I don't want it passed.
Nor do I want to see Geitner as Secretary of the Trreasury.
Obama wanted no one that would be mired in scandal. He can't be the only man in America, or for that matter, the only PERSON in America for this job.. considering the 1st stimulous package was such a failure.
15

SouthernGent,

25/01/2009 22:16:47
Isn't it funny how Joe/Jane Public can see all the waste and inefficiences, yet the people we put in the "government" can't see it or refuse to change it. I bet we could come up with our own 825 billion worth of savings just by cleaning up the crapp we all see on a daily basis.

Amazing.
16

Lynne,

25/01/2009 23:09:36
Southern Gent.. :)..oh do I agree!!
17

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 26/01/2009 15:32:27
Peanuts! The U.S. military budget for 2007 was $1 Trillion. If you want to save tax payers money,look no further than slashing this ridiculous budget.
18

Lynne,

26/01/2009 16:05:09
A. Clamper, You have no idea what you are talking about. This stimulus package has birth control in it, grass for the Capital lawn, and a lot more more that doesn't belong in it.
The last stimulus package , some was spent on decorating bathrooms, golden parachutes for CEOs.

One thing for sure is IF companies, cities and states have to ask for money and they get it, then the heads of these companies, cities and states should have to resign.. THEY FAILED.. and throwing money at them again is not going to change the fact THEY FAILED.

In any other job, they would have been FIRED. They ran their companies into the ground, and but got millions for themselves. BUT THEY FAILED. The banks can't even explain where the money went, or how it was spent. And they want us to give them MORE!!!

19

First Virginian,

USA 26/01/2009 18:45:59
Article Quote:

"It was the latest appeal from the new president for a massive spending bill...and to fulfill campaign pledges."

Answer:

All Americans who want to understand what is going on in the new administration need a copy of "Plunkitt of Tammany Hall: A Series of Very Plain Talks on Very Practical Politics" by William L. Riordon.

A quote from this little book explains:

"Plunkitt tells us how he became a 'statesman,' but not why...One can't read him without sensing that politics was to him what buying and selling railroads was to Jim Fisk. It was the thing he like to do best and did best."

"It also made him rich, famous, and powerful, satisfying appetities that governed successful Americans in the business world. And make no mistake about it; Tammany Hall was big business. With twelve thousand municipal jobs to give and a payroll of twelve million dollars in the 1880's, the leaders of the Hall were in charge of an even bigger corporation than the Scottish-born Andrew Carnegie's iron and steel works."

-From "Plunkitt of Tammany Hall" by William L. Riordon, E.P. Dutton & Co., New York, 1963, p.xviii.

This book is "an insider's manual of how the [political] machine [Tammany Hall] worked," and nothing has changed in American politics to this day.

20

Lynne,

26/01/2009 18:56:54
A. Clamper..Grassfire.org.. quotes Pelosi.. WHY contraceptives and birth control(also abortions) are in the stimulus package.

"Family planning services reduce cost. They reduce cost.
The states are in terrible fiscal budget crises now and part of
what we do for children's health, education and some of
those elements are to help the states meet their financial
needs. One of those - one of the initiatives you mentioned,
the contraception, will reduce costs to the states and to the
federal government."


Loony enough for you? This package is just more of the same.. payoff for an election won, and more pork to please the people that helped get him elected.
21

SouthernGent,

26/01/2009 19:19:50
I actually agree with 19. Time to pull our troops home which would reduce the budget and reposition them for OUR defense. Let the EU, South Korea, Japan, and all the rest increase their own budgets to make up for it. And while we are at it, pull out of NATO and cease all cooperation and funding for that totally pathetic group called the UN.
22

First Virginian,

USA 26/01/2009 21:06:00
#23 SouthernGent

SouthernGent...you are a scholar and a gentleman!

Bring ALL of our troops home, cut off ALL foreign aid and have our public servants in DC start serving We the People as they were elected to do.
23

First Virginian,

USA 26/01/2009 21:34:08
Article Quote:

"Aides said they want people to understand what they could expect-more schools, lower electricity bills-if their member of Congress supported the proposed legislation."

Answer: #21-Continued:

Riordon's "Plunnkitt of Tammany Hall" explains this proposal on page xiv:

"First, the franchise was extended and the ballot lengthened as a result of the egalitarianism of the Age of Jackson...

"Second, mass immigration, particularly from Ireland and Germany, created a huge new electorate, which the Democrats exploited more artfully than the nativist-tinged Whigs and the Republicans who later succeeded the Whigs."

"Third, the city expanded physically, opening opportunities for graft-both honest and dishonest in Plunkitt's vocabulary-through the letting of franchises and the construction of such public improvements as schools and sewers and streets..."

To the victors go the spoils. This is the Chicago political machine transferred from the city to the national level.

Not a new solution after all...just the political machine heirs of New York's Tammany Hall paying off their bought and paid for votes.

Wasn't something said about not hiring any "educated white construction workers?"
24

Lynne,

27/01/2009 00:19:58
Southern Gent.. not to worry... Barney Fwank wants to cut it by 25%.. If these keep going this way... that will happen too.

25

Firozali A.Mulla MBA PhD,

Dar-Es-Salaam 14/02/2009 13:00:17
Obama on the crash course to unfriendliness.
President scores his first major legislative victory
We wait for the second, an axe on the pay that would cripple industry if not slow down. Honest the bonuses are earned and not are not like the Valentine day cards sold in the shops.
The bill, which President Obama is expected to sign into law next week, limits bonuses for executives at all financial institutions receiving government funds to no more than a third of their annual compensation. The bonuses must be paid in company stock that can be redeemed only when the government investment has been repaid. With the measure, lawmakers seek to address public outrage over extravagant Wall Street paydays even as taxpayers bail out the industry.
We read the resignation of one ANOTHER day, another blow for Barack Obama's hopes for a “new politics”. On Thursday February 12th, Senator Judd Gregg of New Hampshire announced that he had withdrawn as Mr Obama's proposed secretary of commerce. Mr Gregg is a Republican—and one, to boot, who once voted for the Commerce Department to be abolished. Bringing him into the cabinet had been billed by the Obama team as an important sign of Mr Obama's commitment to government from the centre.
I thank you
Firozali A. Mulla

 

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