090143: Democrats Admit Stimulus Plan NOT A Quick Fix
January 26, 2009
Washington - The White House warned that the country could face a long and
painful financial recovery, even with major government intervention to stimulate
the economy and save financial institutions.
"We're off and running, but it's going to get worse before it gets better,"
said Vice President Joe Biden, taking the lead on a theme echoed by other
Democratic officials on the Sunday talk shows.
At the end of the Obama administration's first week, the party in power at
both ends of Pennsylvania Avenue sought to lower expectations for a quick fix
despite legislation expected to pass by next month that would pump billions of
dollars into the economy. Democrats also opened the door for even more
government aid to struggling banks beyond the $700 billion bailout already in
the pipeline.
Congress has given President Barack Obama permission to spend the second
$350 billion of a Wall Street bailout package even though lawmakers have
criticized the Bush administration for the way it spent the first half. House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., said she is open to additional government rescue
money for banks and financial institutions. But she said taxpayers must get an
ownership stake in return.
Biden said Obama's choice for Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, will
recommend whether more money is needed for the banks. Geithner could be
confirmed by the Senate as early as Monday.
Congress is working on an $825 billion economic recovery package that
dedicates about two-thirds to new government spending and the rest to tax cuts.
Separate proposals making their way through the House and Senate would combine
tax cuts for individuals and businesses, help for cash-strapped state
governments, aid for the poor and unemployed, and direct spending by the federal
government.
The goal is to infuse money directly into the economy in the hope of
bringing the nation out of recession, while creating 3 million to 4 million
jobs. It would be largest economic recovery package ever enacted; the White
House says the scope rivals the construction of the interstate highway system
after World War II.
Its success or failure could define the first years of Obama's term. On
Sunday, Democrats sought to temper expectations, at least in the short term.
"These problems weren't made in a day or a week or a month or even a year,
and they're not going to get solved that fast," said Lawrence Summers, a top
economic adviser to Obama. "So even as we move to be as rapid as we can in
jolting the economy and giving it the push forward it needs, we also have to be
mindful of having the right kind of plan that will carry us forward over time."
Republicans want the recovery package tilted more toward tax cuts and have
questioned whether government spending programs will revive the economy in the
short-term.
"I just think there's a lot of slow-moving government spending in this
program that won't work," House Republican leader John Boehner of Ohio said. "We
can't borrow and spend our way back to prosperity."
The administration has pledged to spend three-quarters of the proposed money
in the first 18 months after it is approved.
Obama met with Republican and Democratic congressional leaders at the White
House last week to listen to Republican concerns about the package. Obama plans
to meet with more Republican lawmakers this week, though Boehner said there is
little support among House Republicans for the package in its current form.
A House vote is expected Wednesday. Democrats, if united, have a large
enough majority to pass it without GOP backing. But Obama is seeking bipartisan
support on this critical early test of his presidency. Senate Republicans could
block the package but they would have to be united to do so.
Summers said Obama has inherited the worst economy since World War II,
coupled with a federal budget deficit of more than a $1 trillion and soaring
costs for entitlement programs such as Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.
The nation lost a total 2.6 million jobs last year as the housing market
contracted and financial markets collapsed.
The government he said, can afford to spend more than $1 trillion to boost
the economy and save financial institutions. But he warned that fiscal
discipline will be necessary once the economy recovers.
Summers said Obama would end President George W. Bush's tax cuts on those
who make more than $250,000. Pelosi has said she wants to repeal the tax cuts
well before they expire at the end of 2010.
Obama might be willing to simply let them expire, Summers said, though he
was noncommittal. He did say Obama will fight any effort to extend the tax cuts
beyond their expiration date.
"The president has made clear that the question of timing is one we're going
to have to reach as we see how the economy unfolds," Summers said. "But they're
not going to be with us for long."
Republicans argue that the government shouldn't raise taxes on anyone during
tough economic times.
Biden appeared on CBS' "Face the Nation," Pelosi was on ABC's "This Week,"
and Summers and Boehner spoke on NBC's "Meet the Press."
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