Tag Archives: Treasury

The Federal Government Races to the Cliff

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In the 1955 movie Rebel Without a Cause, James Dean and a teenage rival race two cars to the edge of a cliff in a game of chicken.  Both intend to jump out at the last moment.  But the other guy miscalculates, and goes over the cliff with the car.

This is the game that is being played out in Washington this month over the debt ceiling.  The chance is at least 1/4 that the result will be similarly disastrous.    

It is amazing that the financial markets continue to view the standoff with equanimity.   Interest rates on US treasury bonds remain very low, 3% at the ten-year maturity.   Evidently it is still considered a sign of sophistication to say “This is just politics as usual.  They will come to an agreement in the end.”  Probably they will.  But maybe not.   (I’d put a ½ probability on an agreement that raises the debt limit, but just muddles through in terms of the genuine long term fiscal problem.  That leaves at most a ¼ probability of a genuine long-term solution of the sort that President Obama apparently proposed last week – described as worth $4 trillion over ten years.) read more

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Needed in Treasury Plan: Price-discovery, write-down, & taxpayer protection

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Some observations on the plan announced by Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner yesterday:

 

Clearly we need to hear more details.   sympathize with Geithner, who has only been in office a couple of weeks.    He has had to take over in the middle of the worst financial crisis in 77 years, at the same time that he must personally fill out the reams of forms that it takes to get confirmed by the Senate (like all such new appointees)  and to fill lots of positions throughout the upper levels of the Treasury.    But the American public will demand further elaboration  on his plan soon. read more

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Tim Geithner As Treasury Secretary: A Man Who Doesn’t Lose his Cool

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News services reported today that Tim Geithner, currently President of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, was President-elect Obama’s choice to be Secretary of the Treasury. The fiancial markets reacted very positively to the news. This presumably captures both relief that some policy uncertainty has been resolved at this critical juncture and approval that Geithner is the man chosen.   I share the pleasure at this appointment.

Tim Geithner is refreshingly straightforward and personable, and doesn’t “stand on ceremony.”  At the same time, he is cool and unflappable. By coincidence, the Economic Advisory Panel to the NY Fed President, of which I am a member, met today. Unusually, Geithner excused himself at two points in the four-hour meeting to take short phone calls. Given the timing, it seems very likely that one of the phone calls was Senator Obama offering him the Treasury position. These Panel meetings are off the record, but I think I am not betraying any confidences to report that Geithner betrayed no sign to us of what had just happened. No change in demeanor, no change in the substantive flow of the discussion. This is a guy who does not lose his cool.  Just what the country needs. read more

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