Feb. 4 (Bloomberg) -- White House economics director Lawrence Summers urged swift passage of a stimulus bill and pledged further taxpayer funds for major banks, warning that the economy is in danger of sustained declines in consumer prices.
“Deflation is a real risk facing the economy,” Summers, the director of the National Economic Council, said today on a conference call with reporters. “We do not have time to wait” to approve the fiscal-stimulus package the Obama administration is pushing in Congress, he said.
A prolonged slide in prices would worsen the recession by making debts harder to pay off and banks even less likely to make new loans. Summers’s remarks come as the administration seeks congressional approval of the stimulus by the end of next week.
“This bill is imperative for our economic security,” Summers said. “I’ve got great confidence that in our country we do the right thing. So I expect a bill to be signed into law.”
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The stimulus package alone won’t be enough, said Summers, a former Harvard University professor and Treasury secretary in the Clinton administration. Policy makers are readying an overhaul of the Treasury’s financial-bailout program, which may come early next week, and a strategy to stem record mortgage foreclosures.
The focus of the financial recovery plan “will be on maintaining the overall flow of credit” in the economy, Summers said. It will include “government support for the credit markets” and “capital infusions into major financial institutions.”
“Deflation is a real risk facing the economy,” Summers, the director of the National Economic Council, said today on a conference call with reporters. “We do not have time to wait” to approve the fiscal-stimulus package the Obama administration is pushing in Congress, he said.
A prolonged slide in prices would worsen the recession by making debts harder to pay off and banks even less likely to make new loans. Summers’s remarks come as the administration seeks congressional approval of the stimulus by the end of next week.
“This bill is imperative for our economic security,” Summers said. “I’ve got great confidence that in our country we do the right thing. So I expect a bill to be signed into law.”
[..]
The stimulus package alone won’t be enough, said Summers, a former Harvard University professor and Treasury secretary in the Clinton administration. Policy makers are readying an overhaul of the Treasury’s financial-bailout program, which may come early next week, and a strategy to stem record mortgage foreclosures.
The focus of the financial recovery plan “will be on maintaining the overall flow of credit” in the economy, Summers said. It will include “government support for the credit markets” and “capital infusions into major financial institutions.”
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