A “new” recession? What about the recession we’re currently in; it hasn’t gone anywhere?
We’re in deep doo-doo if these economic times don’t change for the better, and soon. This is especially true for the middle-aged and senior citizens. People in these age groups who may have lost their jobs, their savings, and/or their homes don’t have the luxury of time to make up everything that was lost through decades of work. These are the people who have been and will continue to be most affected by the state of the economy.
It’s a sad time for the average American, and according to some, the worst is still to come… TGO
Refer to story below. Source: Associated Press
AFPPresident Barack Obama’s former top economic advisor warned Sunday of a new recession, attacking the recent US credit downgrade as an unwarranted piling on atop an already weak economy.
Larry Summers, former chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisors, joined the Obama administration in criticizing Standard & Poor’s first-ever downgrade of the US credit rating from AAA to AA+.
Summers insisted the country could pay its bills and repeated allegations from administration officials that S&P’s decision to downgrade was linked to a $2 trillion error in its calculations and its use of a faulty baseline.
“S&P’s track record has been terrible and its arithmetic has been worse,” he told the CNN political talk show “State of the Union.”
Summers said the major credit ratings agency acted out of “unhappiness with the solutions that are coming out of Congress for critical economic problems,” but added that “the United States is going to pay its debts.”
He went on to say, however, that rather than blame the S&P, US leaders should focus on speeding up the economic recovery, getting Americans back to work and avoiding a dreaded double-dip recession.1
He also defended Obama’s $800 billion 2009 stimulus package, saying: “There’s certainly a risk of recession, but God knows if we had not pursued these policies, we would be looking at another version of what happened in the 1930s,” referring to the Great Depression.
The United States has struggled to recover from its worst downturn in decades, the 2008-2009 recession triggered by the burst of a housing bubble.
S&P argued that the direction of the country’s debt load and rising fiscal deficits meant it could no longer be included among the world’s most risk-worthy sovereign borrowers.
Critics have cited S&P’s various upbeat assessments of companies and debt instruments weeks before they failed — including the packaged mortgage securities that sparked the 2008 financial collapse.