Despite persistently high unemployment, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Friday the Obama administration plan to stimulate the US economy by spending billions of dollars on construction and other local projects is on the “expected path.”
“There’s been substantial improvements in arresting what was the worst recession globally we’ve seen in generations,” Geithner told lawmakers on Friday.
Geithner’s remarks came as public opinion polls show waning support for US President Barack Obama’s economic policies. Republican critics say the rising unemployment rate is proof that the US$787 billion stimulus has not helped reverse the effects of the recession.
About 2 million jobs have been lost since US Congress passed Obama’s stimulus package in February. Unemployment now stands at 9.5 percent, the highest in 26 years. Some Obama allies have been calling for Congress to pass a second stimulus package.
“I was just wondering, where do you think your plan went wrong?” Representative Bill Posey asked.
Geithner said the rate of decline in the economy has slowed, consumer confidence has improved, the financial system is healing and concern about a financial meltdown has receded.
“Those are critically important signs of initial progress,” Geithner said.
Geithner said unemployment is an inescapable element of a recession. The stimulus plan, he said, “was necessary and critically important to reduce the risk that we’d see hundreds of thousands losses of jobs and we’d see million of job losses beyond this point and see thousands of more business fail unnecessarily.”
Geithner’s defense, before a joint hearing of the US House Financial Services and the Agriculture committees, came in the midst of his call for greater government control over the generally unregulated but complex derivatives market, that he said contributed to the financial crisis.
“Establishing a comprehensive framework of oversight is crucial,” Geithner said in his opening remarks to a joint hearing by the House agriculture and financial services committees.
Despite apprehension among Republicans, the effort to add government restrictions to these more freewheeling financial instruments has gained support within the Democratic-controlled Congress.
“Clearly, we’re going to be significantly expanding regulation of derivatives,” said Representative Barney Frank, the chairman of the Financial Services Committee.
Derivatives are financial instruments whose values are based on something else, such as a mortgage-backed security or a commodity like oil. The allure of the over-the-counter derivative, as opposed to those swapped on exchanges, is that it can be individually negotiated and tailored to meet the specific needs of the buyer.
Geithner said the ease with which derivatives were bought and sold in an era of easy credit encouraged financial institutions and investors to take on too much risk. At the same time, government regulators weren’t given the proper tools to mitigate those risks and protect the American consumer, he said.
“The complexity of the instruments overwhelmed the checks and balances of risk management and supervision,” he said.
The administration’s proposal, part of a broader overhaul package, has run up against much of the financial industry, which says it would raise costs and squash innovation.
Some lawmakers and federal regulators say they are skeptical, too.
“My fear is that the administration is going down the path of shifting risk not to the investors and the dealers, but ultimately to the taxpayers,” said Representative Spencer Bachus, the top Republican on the Financial Services committee.
Taiwanese suppliers to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC, 台積電) are expected to follow the contract chipmaker’s step to invest in the US, but their relocation may be seven to eight years away, Minister of Economic Affairs J.W. Kuo (郭智輝) said yesterday. When asked by opposition Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Niu Hsu-ting (牛煦庭) in the legislature about growing concerns that TSMC’s huge investments in the US will prompt its suppliers to follow suit, Kuo said based on the chipmaker’s current limited production volume, it is unlikely to lead its supply chain to go there for now. “Unless TSMC completes its planned six
Intel Corp has named Tasha Chuang (莊蓓瑜) to lead Intel Taiwan in a bid to reinforce relations between the company and its Taiwanese partners. The appointment of Chuang as general manager for Intel Taiwan takes effect on Thursday, the firm said in a statement yesterday. Chuang is to lead her team in Taiwan to pursue product development and sales growth in an effort to reinforce the company’s ties with its partners and clients, Intel said. Chuang was previously in charge of managing Intel’s ties with leading Taiwanese PC brand Asustek Computer Inc (華碩), which included helping Asustek strengthen its global businesses, the company
Power supply and electronic components maker Delta Electronics Inc (台達電) yesterday said second-quarter revenue is expected to surpass the first quarter, which rose 30 percent year-on-year to NT$118.92 billion (US$3.71 billion). Revenue this quarter is likely to grow, as US clients have front-loaded orders ahead of US President Donald Trump’s planned tariffs on Taiwanese goods, Delta chairman Ping Cheng (鄭平) said at an earnings conference in Taipei, referring to the 90-day pause in tariff implementation Trump announced on April 9. While situations in the third and fourth quarters remain unclear, “We will not halt our long-term deployments and do not plan to
TikTok abounds with viral videos accusing prestigious brands of secretly manufacturing luxury goods in China so they can be sold at cut prices. However, while these “revelations” are spurious, behind them lurks a well-oiled machine for selling counterfeit goods that is making the most of the confusion surrounding trade tariffs. Chinese content creators who portray themselves as workers or subcontractors in the luxury goods business claim that Beijing has lifted confidentiality clauses on local subcontractors as a way to respond to the huge hike in customs duties imposed on China by US President Donald Trump. They say this Chinese decision, of which Agence