Friday, April 3, 2009

President Obama’s Messianic Powers Also Falter in Europe

Sister blogger Stray Yellar Dog points out that Secretary of State Hillary Clinton appears to be the only woman present at this meeting of G-20 leaders from U.S. and China shown above.


As mentioned in an earlier post, our messianic president has not yet succeeded in uniting the red states and the blue states as evidenced by the passage of the original stimulus package in the House with zero Republican votes; the final version passed in the Senate with only three Republican votes.


And just yesterday, Congress passed 2010 budget resolutions of about $3.5 trillion without a single Republican vote.


Nevertheless, Mr. Obama issued a congratulatory statement from Europe after the Thursday votes: “Tonight, the Senate has joined the House of Representatives in taking an important step toward rebuilding our struggling economy.”



Speaking of Europe, an editorial in the LA Times leads off:


This week, President Obama found out how much harder it is to sell economic stimulus packages in Europe than it is in Washington.

The editorial continues:


Obama went to the Group of 20 summit in London hoping to persuade leaders of the world's biggest economies to boost government spending to counteract the global downturn. Backed by Japan and Britain, the administration argued that restoring growth around the world required a stronger fiscal push from other developed nations. Besides, getting more money into the hands of foreign consumers would help them buy goods from the United States, just as the $787-billion stimulus package Congress passed in February should help buttress the demand for imported products here.

Echoing Obama's Republican critics, though, some European leaders said their governments couldn't afford to go more deeply into debt. The borrowing binge could prove counterproductive too, making it harder for businesses to obtain the capital they need to operate and expand. The G-20 settled on vaguely worded promises to keep trying to restore growth and to keep interest rates low. The most tangible commitment was a pledge to provide $1.1 trillion more in financial support, mainly for developing nations. Still, that funding -- a portion of which will come from the U.S. -- could help this country's economy by enabling poorer nations to buy more goods.

The other main point of contention in London was how much regulation to impose on the financial system. Leaders of France and Germany were particularly eager to clamp down on hedge funds, which have come to symbolize dangerous excess -- even though they had little to do with the housing bubble that caused the economy to collapse. The G-20, though, stuck largely to the plan for more comprehensive regulation that finance ministers had already outlined, including a new focus on systemic risks (including those posed by hedge funds), bigger capital buffers and more cooperation among the various countries' regulators. If Europe was hoping for the power to rein in Wall Street, it didn't appear to get it.

For all the discussion about regulation, the G-20's agreement does not address some of the fundamental problems in the financial system, such as the incentives for firms to become too big and intertwined, and the failure to measure and adequately price risk. It will be up to lawmakers and regulators around the globe to address those issues individually, and that's as it should be. Coordinating rules across borders makes sense, given the global nature of the financial industry, but a one-size-fits-all approach to regulating the vastly different financial systems in each country does not.

2 comments:

  1. Hillary is known and loved in Europe and around the world, as is her husband Bill, the former President. Obama is unknown and squirrley at the very least. The world is coming to learn that Hillary is the one who speaks with knowledge, intelligence, insight about world affairs, and it is she who has the respect of world leaders. This is why Obama named her as SOS. It is Hillary who is the face of the United States around the world, and I like that. Obama can go back to the White House and pretend to read poetry books for the duration of his presidency, and we will get on just fine w/o his sophomoric meddling. Gah.

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  2. Thank you for your wonderful comment, Becky. I agree with you. The rest of the world respects experience and maturity; whereas, the US continues to worship "hip" youngsters like Obama.

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