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January 28, 2008

Column: US economy brings worries for both parties

Conditions are less than ideal, let us say, for President George W. Bush’s last state of the union speech, to be delivered today. This is an administration that had precious little to boast about even before the economy began to nose-dive – a calamity that may not yet be plain in the figures but was certified by the Federal Reserve’s dramatic interest rate cut last week. One wonders, how much worse can things get for this White House?

For months, the need to address economic anxiety has been a well-established theme in the campaigns of all the presidential candidates but until recently it was possible for Republicans to talk as though the ongoing expansion were a flawed success. When Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, took the economy’s temperature a week ago and recoiled like the figure in Edvard Munch’s “The Scream”, that calm posture was no longer available. Alarm on Wall Street is business as usual; alarm verging on panic at the Federal Reserve is more difficult to shrug off.

The president’s haste to design a fiscal-stimulus plan in co-operation with Congressional Democrats was almost as disconcerting. The deal, still tentative until the Senate has had its say, underscores the pessimism. In its own right (even assuming that it moves briskly and intact back to the president for his signature) the proposal is a puny initiative. Its mere existence, though, is a weighty political fact.

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One Response to “Column: US economy brings worries for both parties”

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  1. If the US is happy to support the likes of Fannie Mae and Freddy Mae, maybe they would like to take Northern Rock off our hands too. I’ve got a sinking feeling that our money tied up there may soon be needed elsewhere.

    Posted by: figurewizard | February 1st, 2008 at 7:14 pm | Report this comment

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