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Thursday,
October 4, 2001
Bush
urges Congress to pass billion-dollar aid package
By Curt Anderson
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
President Bush and his top economic adviser urged Congress
on Wednesday to approve a stimulus plan of between $60 billion
and $75 billion to avert a steep recession triggered in part
by last months terrorist attacks. I know people
are hurting, Bush said.
Proposing
tax cuts for individuals and businesses, Bush told business
leaders in New York that Washington must provide a kick
start to give people reason to be confident, and we will do
that.
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KRT
Campus
President George W. Bush approves up to $75 billion
to counter a steep recession triggered by last months
terrorist attacks.
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Bush
said the administration is considering tax rebates for people
or accelerating the tax cuts approved earlier this year. For
businesses, corporate tax cuts and investment tax credits
are among the options. Laid-off workers need extra relief,
he said, because the attacks shocked our economy just
like it shocked the conscience of our nation.
Bush
made the remarks shortly after Treasury Secretary Paul ONeill
told the Senate Finance Committee he expects negative real
growth in the current quarter but said similar poor performance
could be avoided in the fourth quarter if consumer confidence
quickly rebounds.
The
depth of this contraction, as well as the pace at which the
economy returns to a healthy rate of growth, will depend in
large part on how fast consumers regain their confidence and
on our success in incorporating new protections against terrorist
acts without material reductions in productivity, ONeill
said.
ONeill
said the president had set the range for the additional economic
stimulus at between $60 billion and $75 billion. Congress
has already approved a $40 billion emergency spending plan
and $15 billion airline aid package.
Administration
officials said Bush wants quick agreement on the size of the
stimulus package before the White House and congressional
leaders delve into the details and comments from both Republicans
and Democrats in Congress indicated that a consensus was forming.
Senate
Majority Leader Tom Daschle, D-S.D. suggested roughly $50
billion. Senate Democrats feel that is an appropriate
size, he said. This is deficit spending once again
and its very disconcerting to many of us. But I dont
know that theres an alternative. We are in an economic,
military and security emergency.
Sen.
Max Baucus, D-Mont., chairman of the Senate Finance Committee,
said he favors another round of tax rebates to help the roughly
30 million Americans whose wages are so low they did not qualify
for the checks mailed out earlier in the year.
irtually
all wage-earners pay Social Security payroll taxes and the
tax relief could be based on those levies.
Baucus
said he also supports an extension in unemployment benefits
and tax relief to encourage businesses to make new investments
in plant and equipment.
ONeill
said the administration is considering all those proposals
as well. He said that it would probably be a good idea to
make any business tax relief retroactive to Sept. 11 so that
businesses did not halt purchases of big-ticket items waiting
for the legislation to be enacted.
ONeill
said the administration was also considering speeding up a
key provision of the massive $1.35 trillion 10-year tax cut
passed earlier in the year. He said the reduction in individual
tax rates scheduled to go into effect in 2004 could be moved
forward to next year, boosting consumer purchasing power and
quickly stimulating the economy.
Additionally,
ONeill said, the administration is considering a proposal
to establish emergency grants that would help governors respond
to concerns raised by the terrorist attacks, such as helping
laid-off workers pay for health insurance.
All sides
urged caution to make sure the stimulus package does not become
so large that it pushes the country back into huge budget
deficits that could force up long-term interest rates.
But in
his comments in New York, Bush did not dismiss the possibility
that spending in the wake of the terrorist attack could put
the federal budget back into deficit. He said urgent priorities
need to be addressed.
Weve
now got a reason to do what it takes to not only provide security
at home, to do what it takes to win the war on terrorism,
weve also got to do what it takes to make sure the economy
gets growing so people can find work, he said.
Congressional
leaders were to hear again Wednesday from Federal Reserve
Chairman Alan Greenspan, who had previously urged a go-slow
approach to assess the impact of last months terrorist
attacks on the already-soft economy.
Democrats
have made it clear they are mainly interested in providing
tax cuts to lower-paid workers and less determined to extend
the tax breaks to those who have already received checks.
But there
are prominent naysayers. Rep. Bill Thomas, chairman of the
House Ways and Means Committee, said rebates would not deal
with the primary economic problem lack of business
investment and huge inventories.
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