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Modified Obama-Geithner Financial Stability Plan Passes Senate
President Barack Obama was in Fort Meyers, Florida, "the foreclosure capital of the United States" today to further sell his economic stimulus package to the American people, while US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner gave a speech formally introducing the Financial Stability Plan.
In his speech Geithner explained to Americans the darker details of the current economic crisis. Stopping short of directly referencing the Great Depression, as Obama had done Monday night in his prime-time address to the nation, Geithner made it very clear to Americans that tough times are ahead and pressed hard for the necessity of a strong economic reaction plan.
Without a powerful Economic Recovery Act, too many Americans will lose their jobs and too many businesses will fail. And unless we restore the flow of credit, the recession will be deeper and longer, causing even more damage to families and businesses across the country.Today, as Congress moves to pass an economic recovery plan that will help create jobs and lay a foundation for stronger economic future, we are outlining a new Financial Stability Plan.
Our plan will help restart the flow of credit, clean up and strengthen our banks, and provide critical aid for homeowners and for small businesses. As we do each of these things, we will impose new, higher standards for transparency and accountability.
The Financial Stability Plan was passed, with amendments, by the US Senate, Tuesday, and will now return to the House for reconsideration. The Senate proposed certain changes to the plan as championed by Obama and Geithner and it will now be up to Congress to decide if those changes are acceptable.
The stimulus plan as it was originally envisioned would cost US taxpayers $819 billion through cash infusions in the economy and lost revenues due to taxation changes. While Republicans and Democrats agree that some sort of formal financial stimulus package is needed they clash on the finer points of the deal.
The Washington Post has an excellent diagram that clearly explains the original $819 billion stimulus plan that Obama and the Democrats want to see pass by February 16, 2009.
In his speech Geithner explained the stimulus plan in detail pointing out the US economy's strong dependence on credit creation and the credit markets. He further outlined why the government must make a commitment to bolstering the banking industry and keeping credit available.
Geithner was careful to detail the Financial Stability Plan as it would benefit the US economy, downplaying overall costs and focusing heavily on the urgent need for economic stimulus. He carefully discussed how America fell into the current economic crisis.
Governments and central banks around the world pursued policies that, with the benefit of hindsight, caused a huge global boom in credit, pushing up housing prices and financial markets to levels that defied gravity.Investors and banks took risks they did not understand. Individuals, businesses, and governments borrowed beyond their means. The rewards that went to financial executives departed from any realistic appreciation of risk.
There were systematic failures in the checks and balances in the system, by Boards of Directors, by credit rating agencies, and by government regulators. Our financial system operated with large gaps in meaningful oversight, and without sufficient constraints to limit risk. Even institutions that were overseen by our complicated, overlapping system of multiple regulators put themselves in a position of extreme vulnerability.
These failures helped lay the foundation for the worst economic crisis in generations.
When the crisis began, governments around the world were too slow to act. When action came, it was late and inadequate. Policy was always behind the curve, always chasing the escalating crisis.
Pointing out the staggering 3.6 million jobs lost since the crisis first hit in October Geithner pointedly told Americans that no stimulus package was not an option. According to Geithner inaction and delay had escalated things to the current level of "the worst economic crisis in generations" and that the time for swift action had come.
Our challenge is much greater today because the American people have lost faith in the leaders of our financial institutions, and are skeptical that their government has – to this point — used taxpayers’ money in ways that will benefit them. This has to change.To get credit flowing again, to restore confidence in our markets, and restore the faith of the American people, we are fundamentally reshaping the government’s program to repair the financial system.
Our work will be guided by the lessons of the last few months and the lessons of financial crisis throughout history. The basic principles that will shape our strategy are the following:
We believe that the policy response has to be comprehensive, and forceful. There is more risk and greater cost in gradualism than in aggressive action.
We believe that action has to be sustained until recovery is firmly established. In the United States in the 30s, Japan in the 90s, and in other cases around the world, previous crises lasted longer and caused greater damage because governments applied the brakes too early. We cannot make that mistake.
Crowd Power
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mudricky
Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom -
Annie Oakley for Obama
United States






Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 04:53 on February 11th, 2009
"The Financial Stability Plan was passed, with amendments, by the US Senate"
Huh?
It was fiscal stumulus package that passed, not financial stability plan. Geithner just announced the latter