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Bush issues stark warning on global economy



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Published Date: 25 September 2008
AMERICA will face "financial panic" and a "long and painful recession" if the US Congress fails to pass a rescue package immediately, President George Bush said today.
Mr Bush said the United States needed to put its economy "back on track" as Congress was considering a 700 billion dollar rescue plan to tackle the "extraordinary" financial crisis gripping the nation.

Scotsman business editor Peter MacMahon blogs on the US financial rescue plan


In his televised prime-time address to the nation, the president also confirmed he had invited both presidential candidates and the leaders of the House and Senate to the White House in a bid to secure the bill to rescue the foundering US economy.

The rescue package, which has caused serious concerns due to the amount of taxpayers' money involved and the unprecedented private sector intervention, was aimed at "preserving America's overall economy", not saving individual companies, Mr Bush said.

America would face a "long and painful recession" if Congress failed to act and "major sectors of America's financial system are at risk of shutting down", he said.

"Our entire economy is in danger."

These were "not normal circumstances" and "without immediate action by Congress, America could slip into a financial panic," Mr Bush said.
He added that the US needed to send a signal around the world that America's financial system was "back on track".

"Our economy is facing a moment of great challenge, but we've overcome tough challenges before and we will overcome this one," Mr Bush said.

"I know that Americans sometimes get discouraged by the tone in Washington, and their seemingly endless partisan struggles, yet history has shown that in times of real struggle, elected officials rise to the occasion.

"And together we will show the world what kind of country America is – a nation that tackles problems head on, where leaders come together to meet great tests, and where people of every background can work hard, develop their talents and realise their dreams."

His speech aimed to explain the rescue package, and the need for it, to the American public, but also to keep pressure on frustrated and angry lawmakers to work out a bipartisan deal quickly.

Mr Bush said the goal was to help the US government to buy up troubled assets so that credit could start flowing again and the economy would rebound.

He also explicitly endorsed several of the changes that have been demanded in recent days from the right and left of the political spectrum.

But he warned that he would draw the line at regulations he determined would hamper economic growth.

Earlier, presidential candidates Barack Obama and John McCain issued a joint statement on the troubled economy, which has seen great upheaval in recent days.

"The American people are facing a moment of economic crisis," it said.

"No matter how this began, we all have a responsibility to work through it and restore confidence in our economy.

"The jobs, savings, and prosperity of the American people are at stake."

It went on: "Now is a time to come together – Democrats and Republicans – in a spirit of cooperation for the sake of the American people.

"The plan that has been submitted to Congress by the Bush Administration is flawed, but the effort to protect the American economy must not fail.

"This is a time to rise above politics for the good of the country. We cannot risk an economic catastrophe.

"Now is our chance to come together to prove that Washington is once again capable of leading this country."

White House press secretary Dana Perino said the goal of the president's unusual meeting with Mr Obama and Mr McCain later today would be to make quick progress on a bipartisan solution to the biggest economic crisis in decades in the US.

She said the call between Mr Bush and Mr Obama lasted several minutes and was "a good conversation".



The full article contains 657 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 25 September 2008 12:26 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Economic indicators
 
1

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 25/09/2008 10:59:40

"First of all, I don't see America having problems." --George W. Bush, interview with Bob Costas at the 2008 Olympics, Beijing, China, Aug. 10, 2008

: )
2

Kelvino,

- New York 25/09/2008 11:33:53


The crowning glory of the Bush mismanagement
years. . . .how profoundly tragic for our country.

"Calamity Bush" will live in infamy !
3

Lianachan,

Highlands 25/09/2008 12:06:27
What - no foreign scapegoat? This isn't the work of terrorists?
4

ebbi,

spain 25/09/2008 12:34:35
it was only a few months ago this idiot was reassuring the us public that everything was fine and economy was on course.what on earth happened? oh another huge debt from the feds to the government? who stands to benefit from it? federal reserve shareholders!!!!
usa,wake up before you are driven bankrupt by your corrupt politicians.
5

Jay Kay,

25/09/2008 12:45:56
Bush makes Nixon look like a great President by comparison.
6

Dorian,

Edinburgh 25/09/2008 13:03:10
What did McCain say about the American economy the other week there "Oh Everything is fine" or something along those lines...oops!
7

Incandescent with Rage!!!,

Scotland 25/09/2008 13:24:00
The American people are being forced to pay up to right the wrongs the 'speculators' in the private sector made. Is that legal? And have the American people a chance of recouping the funds provided?

Of course that situation would never get a chance in this country, the regulators would prevent it...or am I wrong?
8

Adso,

25/09/2008 13:31:42
Interesting to see what is going to happen here. Is $700 billion enough or is that the tip of the iceberg? Take a stake in the banks I say - it's highly likely that the banks will come good again at some stage. Could this be an option in the UK also?
9

Alan B,

25/09/2008 14:33:44
For all the critisms of Bush. He has acted decisively with his rescue plan. With strong government intervention it is in many was more a democractic party type of intervention.
10

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 25/09/2008 14:41:08
"acted decisevely"
The idiot dosen't know what day it is.
11

A Clamper,

Edinburgh 25/09/2008 14:45:56
"acted decisively"
The idiot doesn't know what day it is. (maybe he checks the spelling given to him though) : )
12

SamuraiCelt,

Tokyo 25/09/2008 14:54:13
1. If he thinks the world will not be able to continue when America falls, he's wrong.

2. "No matter how this began..." Aye, right, very nice way sweeping things under the rug.

3. "And together we will show the world what kind of country America is..." -- you've had over 200 years to do that and what do we see? History repeats itself.

He's got someone working hard to make his speeches sound good but WE are not fooled.
13

SamuraiCelt,

Tokyo 25/09/2008 14:58:23
NO 9 Alan B:

And your point is?

Look at the bigger picture.
14

Mcsnagpile,

25/09/2008 14:58:24
Sometimes things look realy bad until you have a gander around the corner.
15

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta CA for more WAR VOTE McCain 25/09/2008 16:19:55
9
Alan B,
2
------At the beginning of his reign, I felt that Bush was lacking intelligence,.

But that changed, to show him exhibiting an evil mind.

And together with Cheney, they almost brought my country to the brink of economic and military disaster.

So on Jan 20 ,2009
"Good riddance of evil in the White House".

GC
16

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 16:48:20
The financial crisis is a side-effect of the way things are done by the mercantile clique that rules the US and is attempting to rule the world. Here are 2 good background articles.

http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/article_3790.shtml

http://www.vdare.com/buchanan/070730_swf.htm

The US dollar is held at artificially high exchange rates. The absolute evidence of this is a very large trade deficit by the US. The gap between imports & exports is made up by governments & central banks around the world voluntarilly recirculating their excess US dollars earned in trade back to the US in the form of either lending or investing. The result of an artificially expensive US dollar is that the domestic economy in the US systematically suffers a loss of jobs & opportunities based on producing goods & services of value.

I say that these institutions outside the USA 'voluntarilly' recirculate these dollars back to the US, but this response is highly encouraged by the people who rule the US. Corruption & private threats are likely involved in getting this result. Many people feel the threat of US military force is a factor. The bottom line as far as the people who rule us is that the value of the US dollar must be respected even if we don't export to create real value.

The result of that is people going bankrupt in the US. We don't have a huge forecosure rate, it is very small percentage of the total, I fear that the foreign press is portraying it differently. Some people in a position to know have asserted that the securities or derivatives based on the mortgages are fraudulent. They're selling financial paper based on the mortgage of one house where the same security is written & sold many times based on one house and one mortgage. This causes fantastic failure rates and its all based on fraud. The US government is fixing to bail out exactly that kind of fraud. And it is investors from around the world who are being bailed out in reality.
17

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 17:01:44
another aspect of this financial crisis that is important is the question as to where this $700 billion (or likely much more) will come from in order to achieve this. The news media & government officials are purposely vague on this point. They don't tell us. Their implication is that the money will be borrowed. Will it be borrowed from the US Federal Reserve or from foreign institutions that have lots of US dollars to get rid of? Either way the US taxpayers will have to pay a fee every year as interest on all this money. If the Federal Reserve provides the money, then this money will be created from thin air, thus generating huge un-earned and un-just profits by the federal reserve. They would create $700 billion from thin air and then receive a stream of income on it in perpetuity. Thats how its been done in the past typically. But today with these 'sovereign wealth funds' around the globe where foreign countries are seeking a way to send their dollars back to the US for the sake of propping up the US dollar and satiating the people who rule us it may be done differently now. Either way, it is a fantastic expense for the US taxpayers to bear when the payments on this are to be made.

What our government & our media don't say is that the US government could create this $700 billion itself and thus would not have to borrow the money and thus wouldn't have to tax the Americans to pay it back. Both Obama & McCain have failed to speak on this concern. They both serve the mercantile clique that rules and accept the corrupt money creation schemes of the Federal Reserve. The 4 alternative candidates of Ron Paul, Cynthia McKinney, Chuck Baldwin & Ralph Nader each say they will not tolerate the Federal Reserve's money creation schemes. But the mass media is owned by the mercantile clique that rules us and so this issue is taboo to even speak of.

Our problems are impossible to solve if we do not overthrow the mercantile clique that rules us. and our probl
18

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 17:02:49
Our problems are impossible to solve if we do not overthrow the mercantile clique that rules us. and our problems are not difficult to solve if we do overthrow that ruling clique. Our failure to overthrow them will mean that US military force will be used to force nations around the world to accept the US dollar as being valuable even though the US economy does not produce enough to cause this value. Then the world will eventually rebel from this and destroy America. But it is not the Americans who have caused this policy mix and it is non-American institutions like the sovereign wealth funds who have enabled it by recirculating their excess dollars back to the US.
19

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 17:11:37
I find ludicrous the comments that try to blame the financial crisis on Democrats. A lot of politicians of both parties over a long period of time have participated in creating policies that allow thievery and dishonest business practices.

We should not re-elect any US Congressmen or US Senators unless they are willing to fundamentally eliminate the Federal Reserve and audit it. Instead, both parties are currently trying to give the Federal Reserve yet more power.

So, we have a problem with money supply right now. In 1913 the US government hired the Federal Reserve (a private bank) to manage the money supply. It has failed miserably history shows. With some investment banks on wall street set to go bankrupt we'd face cascading bankruptcies they tell us. This would cause a large contraction in the money supply. That is the problem. Between 1930 & 1932 one third of the US banks went bankrupt and we sufferred a one third contraction in the money supply. This caused massive joblesness and 'great depression' condition. Today we face the same threat of a rapidly declining money supply unless something is done to prevent it.

An alternative we never speak of is that the government itself can create US dollars and circulate them. We can estimate how much the money supply contracts as these crooked businesses go bankrupt, then produce equivalent US dollars without the Federal Reserve and put these dollars into circulation either by paying the government's bills with this new money or by advancing the money to be lent to private banks. But in doing this we should bypass the Federal Reserve. In the past we've let the Federal Reserve create new US dollars and this is a huge mistake as it results in a massive cash flow to the Federal Reserve in payment for this service. The US today gives 8-10% of its entire GDP to the federal reserve in the form of cash that is almost entirely pure profit. The Americans are very foolish not to comprehend that this h
20

Wally,

By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 17:12:23
The Americans are very foolish not to comprehend that this huge tax on their economy is killing them.
21

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta 25/09/2008 17:36:47
20
Wally,
By The Rivers Of Babylon (USA)

Hey Due if U think for one moment that 80% of my fellow Americans, would read or even understand U rants here . U are sadly mistaken.
The read "The People" at the check out counter in the grocery store.

I know we have national debt of $10.6 trillion and its about to climb.

Yet Bush insults the intelligence of the FEW Americans who are educated . But he fires up the masses who waddle in to WAL-Mart and feed their obese bodies and sing, his tune "We are the Greatest nation on earth".

Give me a big fat break .

better still a warm fresh shroom omelette

GC

GC
22

Wally,

By The Rivers of Babylon (USA) 25/09/2008 18:31:32
GC - I'm not deluded that I know the large majority of Americans are dumbed down, lazy anti-intellectual. It doesn't matter in that it is still important to speak the truth.

and I think that you are mistaken to think that Obama will be any better than Bush. Obama supports the Federal Reserve and all the thievery that it involves. Obama supports endless foreign wars. Obama supports drafting people to support that military effort as well, he said so in a speech just about 2 weeks ago.
23

Alan B,

25/09/2008 18:33:45
#Wally

"The US dollar is held at artificially high exchange rates. The absolute evidence of this is a very large trade deficit by the US."

Part of the reason for this is capital flows. Capital flows dwarf any trade deficit position.

The other issue is high against who. Part of the problem is many countries fix their currency against the dollor at low rates so they can export to the US. There was abit of an arguement with the Chinese regarding this afew yrs ago.

Thirdly the dollor is the oil currency. This may change as currencies like the euro challenge the supremacy of the dollor. But the euro is a relatively new currency and the dollar effectively because the dominent currency as there was not other enity big enough to challenge.

Much also has to do with the cold war and the US trying to artificially prop up friendly or key nations. It was not exactly a surprise that their was an Asian financial collapse after the fall of the USSR etc. Or that Japan has struggled ever since. Before hand it had cronic surpluses and decent economic growth.
24

Alan B,

25/09/2008 18:36:17
#Wally

Does anyone really know what Obama believes. He is similar to the light weight media friendly politician we have over here with Blair.

And while I may be a cynic from this side of the ocean US presidents are largely bought and it is the money guys behind them that control much of what they do.
25

Carolyn 1,

25/09/2008 18:49:02
I read this very informative article in Investor's Daily. If the link doesn't work, lots of newspapers, blogs etc. are posting it, the article is written by Investor's Business Daily, and is named:

How a Clinton Era Rule Rewrite made a Subprime Crisis Inevitable

http://www.accountability-central.com/single-view-default/single-view-lexis-nexis/article/how-a-clinton-era-rule-rewrite-made-subprime-crisis-inevitable-backed-by-white-housefannie-freddi/?tx_ttnews%5BbackPid%5D=1&cHash=e6b0a0bb1c

The article makes a complicated mess easier to understand, such that you can even understand how it all happened, but once you understand it, you can't talk about it without being a rascist. Therein lies the future 'political' problem. The US isn't a racist country- far from it, but the race card still gets thrown on the table when ever it plays well for minorities. -Which is one reason why racism doesn't disappear completely
26

"Hoots" Fandango,

25/09/2008 19:30:36
SELL EVERYTHING!
27

Richardinho,

25/09/2008 21:05:11
It's funny to see Bush embracing socialism in the final days of his presidency.
28

Kiltie Kiltie Caldbum,

3 sters up 25/09/2008 21:17:04
It's fitting that comments of GC always seem to be bashing the capitalistic country of the US. It's ironic to know that his money came from same system he consistently runs down.
29

Kiltie Kiltie Caldbum,

3 sters up 25/09/2008 21:19:44
G.C. I hope indeed that you didn't fertilize the young woman on top of Ben Nevis. The world is better off with only one of you.
30

GalacticCannibal,

Murrieta CA for more WAR VOTE McCAin 25/09/2008 22:32:57
28 Kiltie Kiltie Caldbum,3

Hey Dudess,

I have no money . All the wealth in my family belongs to my mother and father . Who made their fortunes working in Microsoft.

My mother supports me, my father tells me to get a job.

He is a narrow minded workaholic, and wants to be the richest dude in the pine box .

How stupid is that.

And yes my new GF and I did copulate on Ben N during our vacation, and also near the Sydney Bridge when we were in Australia.

And no, her eggs did not get fertilized . She does the pill thingy.

OK dudess

GC

 

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