10/16/09

Geithner Says U.S. Must Instill Confidence in Fiscal Management

Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said the U.S. must reduce its record budget deficit as soon as the economy returns to a sustainable growth rate without relying on government assistance.

“Americans understand that we have to go back to living within our means as a country,” he said in an interview broadcast today on CNBC. “When we have an economy that’s growing again and we get unemployment down, we’re going to have to bring those deficits down.”

The U.S.’s 2009 budget gap widened to $1.42 trillion as the deepest recession since the 1930s crippled tax revenue and the administration increased spending to rescue the economy. The shortfall for the 12 months ended Sept. 30 was more than triple the $455 billion record set a year earlier, the Treasury Department said today in Washington.

Geithner cautioned that a lack of confidence that the U.S. will return to fiscal sustainability may lead to a weaker economic recovery, higher interest rates and constrained investment.

“That’s why deficits matter. That’s why deficits in the end can be very damaging to growth,” he said. “That’s why you cannot live with future deficits as large as ours are likely to be.”

The Treasury chief said he hasn’t decided yet whether to extend the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, adding that it’ll be important to businesses and the housing market that the government has the ability to “continue to put in place programs to help make sure they get credit.”


Asked whether tax cuts enacted during the Bush administration should be allowed to expire next year, he said, “it does not make sense to raise taxes in a recession” and that “getting growth on track led by the private sector is still our most important priority.”

Geithner also said he sees a “good case” for Congress to pass legislation extending unemployment benefits.

- Via Bloomberg

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