« Candidate For RNC Chair Was Member Of Whites-Only Country Club | Home | Poll: GOP Senator Hangs On To Solid Lead In Georgia »

Obama Rolls Out Rubinite Economic Team; Says He May Not Immediately Repeal Bush's Tax Cuts

A couple of quick notes about the big press conference on the economy that Barack Obama just wrapped up unveiling his economic team and preparing the electorate for the long struggle ahead.

One tidbit of news: In the question-and-answer session, he confirmed that he may not repeal Bush's tax cuts through legislation and may let them expire in two years instead.

"Whether that's done through repeal or whether that's done because [the tax cuts] are not renewed is something that my economic team will be providing a recommendation" on, Obama said in response to a reporter's question.

While Obama did promise during the campaign to "roll back" the tax cuts, it's also important to remember that he said back in September that a recession could delay the rollback. At the presser today, Obama reiterated that his larger principle remained the same: That "those who benefitted disproportionally" will "pay a little more."

As expected, Obama confirmed the appointments of Timothy Geithner as Treasury Secretary, Lawrence Summers as the Director of our National Economic Council, Christina Romer as Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors; and Melody Barnes as Director of the Domestic Policy Council.

The appointments have prompted some to observe that his economic team is heavy with proponents of what came to be called "Rubinomics" -- an embrace of balanced budgets, deregulation, and free trade as routes to prosperity.

That said, those who might worry that these choices portend a shift in Obama's emphasis should note that thanks to the meltdown and the talk of bailing out major corporations with taxpayer funds, the need for aggressive regulation of Wall Street right now seems far more obvious than it may have in the early 1990s. So it seems unlikely that the choices signal any kind of ideological shift on Obama's part. Rather, they're about sending a reassuring message to international markets.

Indeed, the presser was yet another reminder of just how enormous the expectations for Obama are right now and how urgently he needs to depress them by adequately preparing the electorate for the long and difficult road ahead.

"This won't be easy," Obama said. "There are no shortcuts or quick fixes to this crisis, which has been many years in the making -- and the economy is likely to get worse before it gets better. Full recovery won't happen immediately."

Full prepared remarks after the jump.

President-Elect Barack Obama

Economic Team Announcement

Monday, November 24, 2008

Chicago, Illinois

Good morning.

The news this past week, including this morning's news about Citigroup, has made it even more clear that we are facing an economic crisis of historic proportions. Our financial markets are under stress. New home purchases in October were the lowest in half a century. Recently, more than half a million jobless claims were filed, the highest in eighteen years - and if we do not act swiftly and boldly, most experts now believe that we could lose millions of jobs next year.

While we can't underestimate the challenges we face, we also can't underestimate our capacity to overcome them - to summon that spirit of determination and optimism that has always defined us, and move forward in a new direction to create new jobs, reform our financial system, and fuel long-term economic growth.

We know this won't be easy, and it won't happen overnight. We'll need to bring together the best minds in America to guide us - and that is what I've sought to do in assembling my economic team. I've sought leaders who could offer both sound judgment and fresh thinking, both a depth of experience and a wealth of bold new ideas - and most of all, who share my fundamental belief that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers; that in this country, we rise and fall as one nation, as one people.

Today, Vice President-Elect Biden and I are pleased to announce the nomination of four individuals who meet these criteria to lead our economic team: Timothy Geithner as Secretary of the Treasury; Lawrence Summers as the Director of our National Economic Council; Christina Romer as Chair of the Council of Economic Advisors; and Melody Barnes as Director of the Domestic Policy Council.

Having served in senior roles at Treasury, the IMF and the New York Fed, Tim Geithner offers not just extensive experience shaping economic policy and managing financial markets - but an unparalleled understanding of our current economic crisis, in all of its depth, complexity and urgency. Tim will waste no time getting up to speed. He will start his first day on the job with a unique insight into the failures of today's markets - and a clear vision of the steps we must take to revive them.

The reality is that the economic crisis we face is no longer just an American crisis, it is a global crisis - and we will need to reach out to countries around the world to craft a global response. Tim's extensive international experience makes him uniquely suited for this work. Growing up partly in Africa and having lived and worked throughout Asia; having served as Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs - one of many roles in the international arena; and having studied both Chinese and Japanese, Tim understands the language of today's international markets in more ways than one.

Tim has served with distinction under both Democrats and Republicans and has a long history of working comfortably, and as an honest broker, on both sides of the aisle. With stellar performances and outstanding results at every stage of his career, Tim has earned the confidence and respect of business, financial and community leaders; members of Congress; and political leaders around the world - and I know he will do so once again as America's next Treasury Secretary, the chief economic spokesman for my Administration.

Like Tim, Larry Summers also brings a singular combination of skill, intellect and experience to the role he will play in our Administration.

As undersecretary, deputy secretary, and then secretary of the Treasury, Larry helped guide us through several major international financial crises - and was a central architect of the policies that led to the longest economic expansion in American history, with record surpluses, rising family incomes and more than 20 million new jobs. He also championed a range of measures - from tax credits to enhanced lending programs to consumer financial protections - that greatly benefitted middle income families.

As a thought leader, Larry has urged us to confront the problems of income inequality and the middle class squeeze, consistently arguing that the key to a strong economy is a strong and growing middle class. This idea is the core of my own economic philosophy and will be the foundation for all of my economic policies.

And as one of the great economic minds of our time, Larry has earned a global reputation for being able to cut to the heart of the most complex and novel policy challenges. With respect to both our current financial crisis, and other pressing economic issues of our time, his thinking, writing and speaking have set the terms of the debate. I am glad he will be by my side, playing the critical role of coordinating my Administration's economic policy in the White House - and I will rely heavily on his advice as we navigate the uncharted waters of this economic crisis.

As one of the foremost experts on economic crises - and how to solve them - my next nominee, Christina Romer, will bring a critically needed perspective to her work as Chair of my Council of Economic Advisors.

Christina is both a leading macroeconomist and a leading economic historian, perhaps best known for her work on America's recovery from the Great Depression and the robust economic expansion that followed. Since 2003, she has been co-director of the National Bureau of Economic Research Monetary Economics program. She is also a member of the Bureau's Business Cycle Dating Committee - the body charged with officially determining when a recession has started and ended - experience which will serve her well as she advises me on our current economic challenges.

Christina has also done groundbreaking research on many of the topics our Administration will confront - from tax policy to fighting recessions. And her clear-eyed, independent analyses have received praise from both conservative and liberal thinkers alike. I look forward to her wise counsel in the White House.

Finally, we know that rebuilding our economy will require action on a wide array of policy matters - from education and health care to energy and Social Security. Without sound policies in these areas, we can neither enjoy sustained economic growth nor realize our full potential as a people.

So I am pleased that Melody Barnes, one of the most respected policy experts in America, will be serving as Director of my Domestic Policy Council - and that she will be working hand-in-hand with my economic policy team to chart a course to economic recovery. An integral part of that course will be health care reform - and she will work closely with my Secretary of Health and Human Services on that issue.

As Executive Vice President for Policy at the Center for American Progress, Melody directed a network of policy experts dedicated to finding solutions for struggling middle class families. She also served as Chief Counsel to the great Senator Ted Kennedy on the Senate Judiciary Committee, working on issues ranging from crime to immigration to bankruptcy, and fighting tirelessly to protect civil rights, women's rights and religious freedom.

Melody's brilliant legal mind - and her long experience working to secure the liberties on which this nation was founded and secure opportunity for those left behind -

make her a perfect fit for DPC Director.

I am grateful that Tim, Larry, Christina and Melody have accepted my nomination, and I look forward to working closely with them in the months ahead. And that work starts today, because the truth is, we don't have a minute to waste.

Right now, our economy is trapped in a vicious cycle: the turmoil on Wall Street means a new round of belt-tightening for families and businesses on Main Street - and as folks produce less and consume less, that just deepens the problems in our financial markets. These extraordinary stresses on our financial system require extraordinary policy responses. And my Administration will honor the public commitments made by the current Administration to address this crisis.

Further, beyond any immediate actions we may take, we need a recovery plan for both Wall Street and Main Street - a plan that stabilizes our financial system and gets credit flowing again, while at the same time addressing our growing foreclosure crisis, helping our struggling auto industry, and creating and saving 2.5 million jobs - jobs rebuilding our crumbling roads and bridges, modernizing our schools, and creating the clean energy infrastructure of the twenty-first century. Because at this moment, we must both restore confidence in our markets - and restore the confidence of middle class families, who find themselves working harder, earning less, and falling further and further behind.

I have asked my economic team to develop recommendations for this plan, and to consult with Congress, the current Administration and the Federal Reserve on immediate economic developments over the next two months. I have requested that they brief me on these matters on a daily basis, and in the coming weeks, I will provide the American people and the incoming Congress with an overview of their initial recommendations. It is my hope that the new Congress will begin work on an aggressive economic recovery plan when they convene in early January so that our Administration can hit the ground running.

With our economy in distress, we cannot hesitate or delay. Our families cannot afford to keep on waiting and hoping for a solution. They cannot afford to watch another month of unpaid bills pile up, another semester of tuition slip out of reach, another month where instead of saving for retirement, they're dipping into their savings just to get by.

Again, this won't be easy. There are no shortcuts or quick fixes to this crisis, which has been many years in the making - and the economy is likely to get worse before it gets better. Full recovery won't happen immediately. And to make the investments we need, we'll have to scour our federal budget, line-by-line, and make meaningful cuts and sacrifices as well - something I'll be discussing further tomorrow.

Despite all of this, I am hopeful about the future. I have full confidence in the wisdom and ingenuity of my economic team - and in the hard work, courage and sacrifice of the American people. And most of all, I believe deeply in the resilient spirit of this nation. I know we can work our way out of this crisis because we've done it before. And I know we will succeed once again if we put aside partisanship and politics and work together, and that is exactly what I intend to do as President.

Thank you, and I'm now happy to take questions.


35 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic

The economy is rapidly declining by the hour and my concern is that too many are expecting too much, too soon from President-elect Obama. He's has tough road ahead and we all need to be a little patient.

user-pic

Already woring on your excuses?

Obama was elected to fix this fucking mess. If he can't and can only make excuses he should just step aside.

user-pic

If you voted for Shrub, you are in part responsible for the current economic fiasco. Admit your responsibility, sport. Obama is being responsible by analyzing just how bad the Republicans have made things.

user-pic

Full Metal Jacket


LT LOCKHART: . In other words, it's a huge shit sandwich, and we're all gonna have to take a bite.

PRIVATE JOKER: Sir... does this mean that Ann-Margret's not coming?

user-pic

But the more bread you have, the less shit you have to eat. Some things never change.

user-pic

Just when that discussion was starting to heat up about the RNC guy and the "whites only" country club, you have to go and post about this "Economic Crisis" or some such thing...

user-pic

The economic crisis is that there are no rich black folks in South Carolina that want to lower their social standing by joing a whites only country club.

user-pic

well for those Libs who wanted more liberals in Obama Ad. well y'all got one in Barnes......

user-pic

Obama's speech pattern of emphasizing the last word before a pause was killing me in today's presser.

There really wasn't too many (any??) specifics, and I think that's what folks and the markets are looking for.

I bet Geithner is the first Treasury Secretary who skateboards.

user-pic

Tough to talk specifics when your the President of Nothing.

user-pic

arrgh, "you're".

And I just mean it is a delicate dance when you are the President Elect...

user-pic

Jonze:

Obama will not get any bonus points anymore for emphasizing the last word. The entire economy is at risk, and I'm sure no one focused or at least no one should focus on how he emphasizes last word.

Also, giving specifics at this stage will not help much. I don't really expect him to detail the plan on television. He will stress the 2.5 million jobs and middle class tax cuts because those are the selling points.

user-pic

If he uses a skateboard to get around on, I wonder what he's gonna use to balance the books? From someone who thinks outside the box, Geithner is gonna dazzle us with some unconventional techniques that no one has ever tried to use 'cause no one has ever thought outside the realm of possibilities.

user-pic

The Economic Crisis.... we ain't seen nothing yet. The pit in my stomach is getting bigger....

In other news my uncle has lost 40% of his retirement funds in the last 3 months, now he'll stay in his job for years, and nobody will move on up. Meanwhile, the same thing happens across the nation. I will probably end up working on my dad's farm again, one cum laude Bachelor's degree and five years later after searching for a steady job.

The pit grows... I think it will be a diamond soon under all the pressure.

user-pic

Relax!

We have company!

The whole world is with us on this trip!

user-pic

I'm in the same boat, and I haven't even had the nerve to calculate the actual drop in my account. I've just been reading the daily emails from my broker with the daily fund figures. I lived through the '87 drop, and was comfortable waiting it out. Now, closing in on 60, I can wait for it to come back, but I'm not sure I'll see it regain the trendline it was on bB (before Bush). At the rate it had been going, it should be worth 3 times what it was at the end of the Clinton years.

user-pic

I'm fine with letting the income and capital gains cuts expire in 2011. But what we cannot tolerate is letting the estate tax go away for one year in 2010. There has to be some action on this soon, because once it goes away they'll all be whining to keep the Death Tax dead.

Freeze it now at 2009 levels -- $3.5 million and 45% -- and be done with it.

user-pic

I couldn't agree with you more, the Estate tax needs to be frozen, in fact any tax cuts for the rich that haven't completely phased in must be frozen at CURRENT levels, not giving any ADDITIONAL breaks for 2009 if you make over $250k.

user-pic

It's astounding how succesful republicans have been since Reagan in selling the idea- of taxcuts to the rich-to the poor.

user-pic

At the expense of the poor.

user-pic

Letting Bush's tax cuts to the rich expire as scheduled, instead of trying to do that right away, might be a way to get Republicans on board with his emergency stimulus package. Certainly, it removes one item of complaint (that we "shouldn't raise taxes on ANYONE" in this climate) that would be a convenient excuse for any Republican looking to obstruct Obama's economic agenda right from the start.

I'm disappointed in that, but I'll bow to political realities. Some things are more important than others, after all.

user-pic

I agree.

user-pic

Tax cuts or tax increases are not what the repugs are after...its' Obama's universal health care. If that gets thru, their days as a political party will have ended. Taxes are nothing more than a sideline.

user-pic

Precisely. And nothing - NOTHING - Obama does or doesn't do will get the repugs on board with anything.

They're at the very bottom now and have nothing to gain by cooperating and nothing to lose by obstructing.

And blind, mindless obstructing feels soooooo good!

Now's the time to kick the repugs in the head and rip off their balls:

Raise the tax rate to 95 percent on $1 million income, including dividends and capital gains, graduating down to 50 percent on $500K.

Establish single-payer health insurance.

Raise the minimum wage immediately to $10 per hour, increase the income cap on FICA taxes to $500K and cut the FICA percents in half.

Slap a huge carbon tax on everybody, with 100 percent rebates for use of renewable energy.

And just to make sure the repugs suffer in excruciating pain and never recover, restore the Fairness Doctrine.

They're impotent and making nasty, annoying threats.

Fuck 'em.

user-pic

A prescient quote by Geithner from a couple of years ago:

The changes that have reduced the vulnerability of the system to smaller shocks may have increased the severity of the large ones.

http://www.ny.frb.org/newsevents/speeches/2006/gei060914.html

user-pic

So they're using the band-aid approach when they should be using a tourniquet. Says a lot about repugs and their understanding of economics.

user-pic

Well, that was uneventful. I think that it is debatable for him to be doing this when, as pointed out by dorn76, obama is president of nothing right now. It boosts expectations and there is little that he can do right now.

user-pic

There's little Obama can do *that we can see* right now. He's doing a bunch of work behind the scenes. Compelling his fellow Senators to get ready to grab an oar on Jan. 6 and pull like crazy to get something ready by Jan. 20 would be a great accomplishment.

He's getting his cabinet together. He's preparing the public for a long haul. The ya-whoo's will screech, the mindless media will keep asking the questions, "Is it fast enough? Is it too little too late?" because that will help them sell advertising.

And the majority of Americans will stay focused, do their part, be realistic, and not get rattled by the Institutionalized Morons. Our majority will be so enabled because our leaders are up to the task of leading us out of this mess.

Obama's doing exactly what he needs to do right now. That focus got him elected; that focus is helping him assemble the talent he needs to drive the agenda; that focus will enable him to be the President we need.

user-pic

Agree, MotoCrat. What he can do publicly right now - assembling a team of experienced, smart, capable people - Obama has done. And one must assume a lot more is being done behind the scenes.

user-pic

I'm really not arguing about your points. I think he should be doing his stuff behind the scenes and rolling out appointments. However, I don't know about the pressers and speeches and another one tomorrow. That stuff might be a mistake. That was my point.

user-pic

Gotcha. Yes, managing expectations is really important. *Now* I get your point. Agree; we should hold pressers / speeches when we have something important to share. That's probably more like once every 2 weeks.

As MSM continues to whine about Obama's lack of progress, let's just ignore them. A majority of Americans seem to have figured out the MSM's act. (Make up shit so people tune in and see Proctor and Gamble's commercials.)

OTOH, our heroes sure have been right alot about working w/ the mediocre, er, media.

user-pic

Obama's appointing all the Clintonites who engineered the repeal of Glass-Steagall: how grand. This and no real liberals appointed to cabinet positions. But then again, we knew Obama to be a mealy-mouthed neoliberal all along with hogwash like, "the American people don't want much from Government, just a little helping hand," etc., etc.

I'm glad he beat McCain, but we need to be very active in congressional primaries if the "change we need" will ever happen. Trillions of dollars for venture capitalists and nothing for tens of thousands of union workers in the rust belt and all of the businesses and communities that depend on them is a sin.

user-pic

Short term political tactics aside, repealing the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy is very desirable as an economic stimulus measure. The failure of trickle down economics is part of the problem. The taxes saved by the wealthy have neither been invested wisely nor spent on products and services that create good jobs.

Returning these tax revenues to the federal government would reduce the deficit and enable the federal government to direct these revenues to infrastructure development and public services that build our economy. Some of these revenues should be returned to state and local jurisdictions, thereby forestalling the need for local and state governments to cut budgets, this would save hundreds of thousands of job cuts. Teachers, road crews, sanitation workers...
would keep working and keep consuming. Obama has to fund his economic stimulus spending with new revenues, or it has to compete with other government programs or add to the deficit.

"New" taxes are not a brake on the economy, if the funds are immediately put to more productive use.

user-pic

The constant drumbeat that we are fucked does not build a lot of confidence. Confidence is one of, if not the most important, keys to getting out of this economic labyrinth.

Obama is already setting us up for a hard fall rrather than showing courage (confidence in the face of fear and danger).

It is not the falling that hurts, it is the hitting the ground. Obama is reinfording the notion that it is inevitable that we are going to hit the ground.

Good work P.E.

user-pic

Can we reduce Citigroup's Robert “The Man Who Brought You the Citigroup Disaster” Rubin’s salary to a dollar a year? Also, demand a giveback of 500 million in past salary already paid.

Rubin turned Citigroup into a wild west gambling casino. Using ponzi schemes, alchemy,leveraging and other hocus-pokus, this man single-handedly turned toxic sub-prime mortgages into seeming gold and deluded purchasers all over the world into buy this worthless crap!

That this huckster spawned Obama economy "geniuses" Summers and Geithner, is proof enough that we're in deep doo-do.

Leave a comment

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address