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View Full Version : Bush outlines emergency economic growth package in face of recession



piet11111
18th January 2008, 20:27
Bush Backs $145 Billion Economic Plan

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Bush, acknowledging the risk of recession, embraced about $145 billion worth of tax relief Friday to give the economy a "shot in the arm. "

Bush said such a growth package must also include tax incentives for business investment and quick tax relief for individuals. And he said that to be effective, an economic stimulus package would need to roughly represent 1 percent of the gross domestic product -- the value of all U.S. goods and services and the best measure of the country's economic standing.

"There is a risk of a downturn," the president said in his remarks at the White House.

Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, speaking after Bush's remarks, said 1 percent of GDP would equate to $140 billion to $150 billion, which is along the lines of what private economists say should be sufficient to help give the economy a short-term boost.

Paulson said the largest part of the stimulus package would be targeted to individual taxpayers. One Republican official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said Bush was hoping to target about $100 billion toward individuals and about $50 billion toward businesses.

The president and Congress are scrambling to take action as fears mount that a severe housing slump and painful credit crisis could cause people to close their wallets and businesses to put a lid on hiring, throwing the nation into its first recession since 2001.

Bush said that Congress and the administration need to settle on a temporary economic package that could be implemented quickly to "keep our economy growing and create jobs." While Bush focused on taxes, Democratic and Republican leaders in Congress have been working on a package that would also include extending and perhaps increasing unemployment benefits and a temporary increase in food stamps.

"Letting Americans keep more of their money should increase consumer spending," he said.

Bush outlined several criteria for the package to meet: It must be "big enough to make a difference in an economy as large and dynamic as ours," it must be built on "broad-based

so tax cuts again ?
is there anyone that thinks this will work ?

jake williams
18th January 2008, 21:20
is there anyone that thinks this will work ?
No. Semi-capitalist/market societies (and pure theoretical capitalist societies, but that's a separate question) are insane and unsustainable and won't ever work, except in the short term. He might, sort of, be able to fudge a number for awhile, but for one, it'll partly be pure chance, and for two, it won't last.

Lynx
19th January 2008, 05:29
I'm surprised a stimulus package is being proposed. Has politics trumped economics :confused:

peaccenicked
19th January 2008, 14:06
Bush is conning us. We are in the middle of a recession.

The major Wall Street banks have already racked up losses of $100-billion in the subprime debacle. That's still less than the roughly $170-billion banks lost in the savings-and-loans crisis of the 1980s, or the $2-trillion that investors lost when the technology bubble burst in 2001.
Some experts have predicted that banks could ultimately write off as much as $500-billion in investments.
The toll on household wealth, however, would be much greater. A 10-per-cent decline in house prices would wipe out $2-trillion worth of household wealth.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080118.ECONOMY18/TPStory/Business/columnists

And Here http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20080118.RKOZA18/TPStory/Business

Keyser
19th January 2008, 15:20
I was suprised to see nothing new but yet more tax cuts being offered as the only remedy to the sub-prime/credit crunch crisis.

It also seems that all of the runners in the Republican Party cacuses are speaking along the same lines as the current administration too.

Tatarin
19th January 2008, 16:42
They are ready to insert billions of dollars when this happens, yet when schools are being closed, people dies of preventable diseace they somehow don't have anything.

ComradeR
20th January 2008, 12:54
This amounts to nothing more then the bourgeois politicians trying to hide the fact that their hands are pretty much tied by saying they're doing something. In reality 145 billion won't make a dent in the massive US economy and won't stop the continuing fall into crippling recession.

They are ready to insert billions of dollars when this happens, yet when schools are being closed, people dies of preventable diseace they somehow don't have anything.
Thats the nature of capitalism for you.

peaccenicked
22nd January 2008, 01:32
here is an explanation of Bush's Con (http://www.dailyscare.com/2869/bushs-voodoo-stimulus-package-250-rebate-for-every-taxpayer)

Lenin II
23rd January 2008, 06:50
This is absolutely nothing new, as conservatives are always insisting that tax cuts cause an "economic boom." What they fail to mention when advocating such things is that they only cause a boom for the highest and richest classes of society, while the have-nots starve. It's the same thing as the Reagan years with the truly evil concept of "trickle-down" economics. The only war the right seems determined to win is the class war, with them as the landowners and us as the serfs.