Sept. 26 (Bloomberg) -- More than 150 U.S. economists, including three Nobel Prize winners, urged Congress to hold off on passing a $700 billion financial market rescue plan until it can be studied more closely.
In a Sept. 24 letter to congressional leaders, 166 academic economists said they oppose Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's plan because it's a ``subsidy'' for business, it's ambiguous and it may have adverse market consequences in the long term. They also expressed alarm at the haste of lawmakers and the Bush administration to pass legislation.
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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...z2Vws&refer=us
In a Sept. 24 letter to congressional leaders, 166 academic economists said they oppose Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson's plan because it's a ``subsidy'' for business, it's ambiguous and it may have adverse market consequences in the long term. They also expressed alarm at the haste of lawmakers and the Bush administration to pass legislation.
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http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...z2Vws&refer=us
This guy says it will be fine
One Less Headache
Douglas Porter, CFA, Deputy Chief Economist
It may be thin gruel, but there is at least one positive
development amid the financial turmoil of recent weeks—
inflation is poised to melt, even if the U.S. rescue package
passes. While that may seem like small solace, it is a big
change from just two months ago when it appeared that
global policymakers were facing the very real prospect of
both a sharp slowdown and rising inflation. It was that very
combination of stagflationary forces which turned the
1970s bear market into the worst stock market downturn in
the post-war period, and a retreat in inflation would
remove at least one thorn from the side of policymakers.
This week Bernanke maintained that upside risks to
inflation were “a significant concern.” On the contrary, the
U.S. inflation outlook now seems uncomplicated—a sharp
slowdown in spending, the $40 drop in oil prices, milder
grain prices, a less-weak U.S. dollar, and restrained wage
growth all suggest that headline inflation is poised to ease
rapidly in the months ahead. Indeed, after dipping slightly
to 5.4% in August, U.S. inflation could recede to around 2%
by mid-2009, even under conservative assumptions for
food and energy prices (Chart 1). If commodity prices
continue to plummet at anything close to trends since midyear,
which saw the biggest two-month spill on record,
even lower inflation lies ahead. And, we do not view the
proposed TARP as a near-term problem for inflation—it is
an exchange of assets, not $700 billion of net new stimulus.
page 8
http://www.bmonesbittburns.com/econo...0926/focus.pdf
Douglas Porter, CFA, Deputy Chief Economist
It may be thin gruel, but there is at least one positive
development amid the financial turmoil of recent weeks—
inflation is poised to melt, even if the U.S. rescue package
passes. While that may seem like small solace, it is a big
change from just two months ago when it appeared that
global policymakers were facing the very real prospect of
both a sharp slowdown and rising inflation. It was that very
combination of stagflationary forces which turned the
1970s bear market into the worst stock market downturn in
the post-war period, and a retreat in inflation would
remove at least one thorn from the side of policymakers.
This week Bernanke maintained that upside risks to
inflation were “a significant concern.” On the contrary, the
U.S. inflation outlook now seems uncomplicated—a sharp
slowdown in spending, the $40 drop in oil prices, milder
grain prices, a less-weak U.S. dollar, and restrained wage
growth all suggest that headline inflation is poised to ease
rapidly in the months ahead. Indeed, after dipping slightly
to 5.4% in August, U.S. inflation could recede to around 2%
by mid-2009, even under conservative assumptions for
food and energy prices (Chart 1). If commodity prices
continue to plummet at anything close to trends since midyear,
which saw the biggest two-month spill on record,
even lower inflation lies ahead. And, we do not view the
proposed TARP as a near-term problem for inflation—it is
an exchange of assets, not $700 billion of net new stimulus.
page 8
http://www.bmonesbittburns.com/econo...0926/focus.pdf
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