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Geithner: No double-dip slump but recovery slowReutersMonday, February 8, 2010 | |
(Reuters) Ń The risk the economy will slip back into recession is lower now than at any time in the past year, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said on Sunday, while conceding that recovery will be slow and uneven.
In an interview on ABC News’ “This Week,” Geithner dismissed concerns that rising U.S. indebtedness might put pressure on the United States’ prized triple-A credit rating.
Credit ratings agency Moody’s last week warned that anemic U.S. growth, on top of already stretched government finances, could put pressure on the country triple-A status.
“Absolutely not,” Geithner said when the interviewer suggested rising debt levels could put pressure on the top-notch rating. “That will never happen to this country.”
The U.S. economy expanded at an annual rate of nearly 6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009 and Geithner said it was definitely “healing” after the financial crisis that drove it into recession in late 2007.
“This is going to take a while and it’s going to be uneven,” Geithner said in an interview taped before leaving for the Canadian Arctic on Friday to attend a meeting of Group of Seven rich nations’ finance ministers and central bankers in Iqaluit, capital of the vast Inuit territory of Nunavut.
ABC released portions of the Geithner transcript on Friday.
Geithner claimed there were even some encouraging signs in Friday’s report on unemployment for January, which showed another 20,000 jobs lost but a dip in the unemployment rate to 9.7 percent from 10 percent in December.
He said the Obama administration is doing everything it can to enhance recovery prospects and played down chances that growth might stall and push the United States back into recession.
“I think we have much, much lower risk of that today than at any time over the last 12 months or so,” Geithner said.
The Treasury is heavily reliant on borrowed money to fund the government’s day-to-day operations, which it raises by selling Treasury notes and bonds throughout the world in rising volumes to fund budget deficits that are forecast to hit $1.6 trillion in fiscal 2011.
Geithner said there was no sign that investor interest was waning in U.S. debt, adding that, to the contrary, it was sought out because of trust in the U.S. ability to repay.
“If you step back and look at what has happened throughout this crisis, when people were most worried about the stability of the world, they still found safety in (U.S.) Treasuries and the dollar,” he said. “You’re still seeing that every time.”
| Comments: |
| theQ @ 2010-02-08 19:24:26 | Does the public really believe what the goverment says? A goverment that has driven the country bankrupt....i don't. |
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