Obama warns Wall Street over fiscal crisis | Inquirer Business

Obama warns Wall Street over fiscal crisis

/ 08:29 AM October 03, 2013

In this Oct. 1, 2013, photo, President Barack Obama gestures during a statement on the government shutdown in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington. On Wednesday, Oct. 2, Obama sent Wall Street a blunt warning that it should be very worried about a political crisis that could trigger a US debt default. AP

WASHINGTON—President Barack Obama sent Wall Street a blunt warning Wednesday that it should be very worried about a political crisis that has shut down the government and could trigger a US debt default.

Obama said he was “exasperated” by the budget impasse in Congress, in an interview with CNBC apparently designed to pressure Republicans by targeting the financial community moments after markets closed.

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The president then met Republican and Democratic leaders for their first talks since the US government money’s ran out and it slumped into a shutdown now well into its second day.

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But few informed observers held out much hope for a sudden breakthrough.

Obama was asked in the interview whether Washington was simply gripped by just the latest in a series of political and fiscal crises which reliably get solved at the last minute.

Unusually frank

In unusually frank comments on issues that could sway markets, Obama warned that investors should be worried.

“This time’s different. I think they should be concerned,” Obama said, in comments which may roil global markets.

“When you have a situation in which a faction is willing potentially to default on US government obligations, then we are in trouble,” Obama said.

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Obama said he would not negotiate with Republicans on budget matters until House lawmakers pass a temporary financing bill to reopen federal operations and raised the $16.7 trillion dollar debt ceiling.

If the borrowing limit is not lifted by the middle of the month, the US government could default on its debts for the first time in history.

“If and when … that vote takes place and the government reopens, and if and when they vote to make sure Congress pays our bills on time so America does not default on costs it’s already accrued, then I am prepared to have a reasonable, civil negotiation around a whole slew of issues,” Obama said.

The president said he had “bent over backwards” to accommodate Republicans—a statement his foes would dispute—but warned it would set a terrible precedent to allow lawmakers of any party to hold a White House to ransom over raising the debt ceiling.

“Absolutely I am exasperated, because this is entirely unnecessary,” Obama said.

The government shutdown has sent 800,000 federal workers home, closed museums, national parks and monuments and crippled government services.

Obama wants a straightforward temporary spending bill to end the first shutdown in 17 years, while Tea Party Republicans have repeatedly tied the measure to a dismantling or delay of his signature healthcare law.

Hopes fading

With neither side willing to budge, hopes of an early exit to the shutdown are fading.

“Most of the time you can see an end game,” Republican Senator Johnny Isakson told MSNBC. “Right now there’s no end game in sight.”

Some signs of incremental movement emerged, with Democrats pledging to appoint negotiators to thrash out a long-term budget—provided that the Republicans agree to an immediate six-week federal spending measure with no anti-Obamacare provisions.

Obama met at the White House with his chief political rival, House Speaker John Boehner, as well as top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell to address the standoff.

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid and top House Democrat Nancy Pelosi were also there.

Boehner’s office said the fact the talks were taking place was a victory in itself and had the potential to lead to “serious talks between the two parties.”

European Central Bank chief Mario Draghi warned Wednesday that a US shutdown “is a risk if it is protracted.”

“It would be a risk not only for the US, but also the world economy,” Draghi said.

Obama on Wednesday gathered a group of high flying CEOs, apparently hoping they would pressure Boehner to pass a straight temporary funding bill.

Goldman Sachs boss Lloyd Blankfein warned that America was getting onto dangerous ground by flirting with not raising the debt ceiling. A previous period of brinkmanship on the issue badly hit the US credit rating.

“There’s a precedent for a government shutdown, there’s no precedent for a default,” he said after meeting Obama.

Locked out tourists furious

Furious tourists, meanwhile, are locked out of Washington museums and monuments, as well as national parks and landmarks like the Statue of Liberty in New York. Cancer research and treatment at the world-class National Institutes of Health has ground to a halt.

The fallout has already caused Obama to shorten his long-planned Asia trip, scrapping stops in Malaysia and the Philippines that were due to begin this weekend, so he could attend to the crisis at home.

The president’s attendance at regional summits in Indonesia and Brunei was also in doubt.

A no show in Asia would be seen as a blow to Obama’s policy of rebalancing US diplomacy and military might toward the fast-growing region.

But James Clapper, director of National Intelligence, warned lawmakers that US security was already being compromised.

Seventy percent of the intelligence workforce had been furloughed, potentially offering an opening to foreign recruiters in the field, Clapper said.

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“This seriously damages our ability to protect the safety and security of this nation,” Clapper said.—Stephen Collinson, Michael Mathes

TAGS: Budget, economy, politics, US

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