U.S. financial plan due in weeks
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. President Barack Obama will lay out a comprehensive plan in the next few weeks to attack the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, Timothy Geithner, his nominee to head the U.S. Treasury, said on Wednesday.
At a Senate confirmation hearing at which he apologized for a lapse in paying more than $34,000 (24,332 pounds) in taxes earlier this decade, Geithner sketched out a multi-pronged approach to stabilise housing, strengthen banks and support consumer credit to help the economy break free of a year-long recession.
"What the president is going to do is he's going to come before the Congress, we hope in the next few weeks, and lay out for the American people a comprehensive plan to help stabilise the core of our financial system," Geithner told the Senate Finance Committee.
Geithner, who in his current job as president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank has been a key participant in government efforts to prop up financial markets, declined to provide specifics, saying details had yet to be worked out. "We've seen the costs, in terms of uncertainty created by tentative signals not followed up by clear actions," he said.
Geithner's comments disappointed some investors, who had hoped the administration would move more quickly to help banks unload a mountain of bad debt, and briefly pushed stocks into negative territory before a big late-day rally.
"To expect that Timothy Geithner or any one else in the new team would have a comprehensive plan to revert this crisis in less than 24 hours after the start of the new administration, is a cheap shot," said Roger Kubarych, chief U.S. economist with Unicredit Markets and Investment Banking in New York. "It is true that the team was formed a couple of months ago and they've been tackling the issue but people forget this is a new Congress and any plan needs to be approved by the very same senators that are now grilling Geithner."
Geithner said the new administration was reviewing a "broad range of proposals," including the option of setting up a government-run "bad bank" to take toxic assets off banks' books. The United States took a similar approach to resolve the savings and loan crisis of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
He said the retooling of the government's $700 billion financial rescue program would tackle the housing crisis and involve "much more substantial direct support to credit markets" so lending can resume to small businesses, car buyers, college students and real estate markets. Continued...
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