Feb. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan said the U.S. may be doing too little to repair its financial system and promote an economic recovery.
President Barack Obama yesterday signed into law a $787 billion economic stimulus package of tax cuts and increased spending. He has also pledged to use the bulk of the roughly $315 billion left in the bank bailout fund approved by Congress last October to revive the battered financial industry.
“The amount of money in both these pots may not be enough to solve the problem,” Greenspan said in an interview before a speech yesterday to the Economic Club of New York.
The comments highlight the difficulties Obama faces in fighting the steepest recession in a generation. The economy contracted at an annual pace of 3.8 percent in the fourth quarter of last year, the most since 1982.
In the speech, the former Fed chairman said “what we are currently going through is a once-in-a-century type of event. It will pass.”
Greenspan, who now heads his own Washington-based consulting company, warned in his speech that the positive impact of the stimulus package on the economy will peter out if the U.S. fails to fix its financial system.
“Given the Japanese experience of the 1990s, we need to assure that the repair of the financial system precedes the onset of any major fiscal stimulus,” he said.
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Saturday, 21 February 2009
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