Bush tries to allay fears over economy
Updated: 2008-01-30 07:17
WASHINGTON: US President George W. Bush sought to calm Americans' fears about the economy on Monday night while charting a course he hopes will keep him relevant in his final year in office.
With the specter of recession supplanting the Iraq war as the top US concern, Bush acknowledged in his final State of the Union address that growth is slowing but insisted the country's long-term economic fundamentals are sound.
He prodded Congress to act quickly on a $150 billion economic stimulus package laid out last week.

"In the long run, Americans can be confident about our economic growth. But in the short run, we can all see that growth is slowing," Bush said in a globally televised speech to Congress.
Politically weakened by the unpopular war in Iraq, eclipsed by the race to choose his successor and scrambling to stave off lame-duck status, Bush presented no bold new ideas.
He urged Americans to be patient with the mission in Iraq almost five years after the US-led invasion.
He touted security gains in Iraq he ascribed to a troop buildup ordered last January but gave no hint of any further troop reductions there, asserting that such decisions would depend on his commanders' recommendations.
Bush's 7th State of the Union speech was a chance to set the tone for his waning months in the White House and try to salvage his frayed legacy before he leaves in January 2009.
Topping Bush's agenda was a push for congressional passage of a stimulus package meant to avert recession in an economy suffering from high oil prices and a housing slump.
"At kitchen tables across our country, there is concern about our economic future," Bush said.
He acknowledged rising food and gas prices and increasing unemployment.
He is trying to head off attempts by some Senate Democrats to expand the plan beyond the tax rebates and business investment incentives agreed with House of Representatives leaders last week.
The impetus for compromise is that no one, least of all an unpopular president nearing the end of his watch, wants to be blamed for an economic meltdown before the Nov 4 elections.
Some economists say the stimulus measures may buy time but will not be enough to solve the woes that have roiled global financial markets.
"We're going to engender another bubble here because they're bailing the consumer and they're bailing out banks," said Michael Pento, senior market strategist at Delta Global Advisors in California.
Delivering the Democratic response to Bush, Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius called the stimulus plan only a "temporary fix" and urged Democrats and Republicans to work together so "we won't have to wait for a new president to restore America's role in the world. "
On Iraq, Bush was in a better position than a year ago, when he implored skeptical Americans to embrace his plan to send thousands more troops to Iraq.
"Our enemies in Iraq have been hit hard," he said. "They have not been defeated, and we can still expect tough fighting ahead."
He announced no new troop reductions despite continuing calls from Democrats for a withdrawal timetable, something polls show most Americans want as well.
Bush, a latecomer to the fight against global warming, also committed $2 billion for a new international fund to promote clean energy technologies and combat climate change.
He has faced international criticism for repeatedly rejecting caps on greenhouse gas emissions in the US, the world's biggest polluter.
Agencies
(China Daily 01/30/2008 page1)
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