New York, Oct. 12, stock investment .- The U.S. is heading towards fiscal disaster and no one in Washington is doing anything about it, the authors of the Simpson-Bowles reform plan and Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein told CNBC Thursday. "People are never going to understand how critical this particular time in history is," said Erskine Bowles, the North Carolina businessman and co-chairman of President Barack Obama's National Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform. "We have $7.7 trillion worth of economic events that are going to hit America in the gut in December, and in Washington they're doing nothing about it."
Bowles' co-chair on the commission was former Wyoming Sen. Alan Simpson, who said political culture in Washington is preventing any action to address what is known as the "fiscal cliff."
"They're both in this," Simpson said of the warring Democratic and Republican parties. "They worship the god of re-election."
Wall Street titan Blankfein said resolving the conflict would go a long way toward rejuvenating confidence in the financial markets. "I think the (presidential) candidates know how serious it is," he said. "I think they're trying to avoid it in part because it is so consequential and serious, and the ideas that would be put forward are unattractive to some people."
If the political differences were settled and a solution to the fiscal cliff devised — even one that is far afield from the Simpson-Bowles recommendations — it would mean a lot to markets and businesses such as Goldman [GS 121.99
1.91 (+1.59%)
], he added.
"I'd be a buyer of this market. Goldman Sachs would," Blankfein said. "We're not only advisers to companies, we're a company ourselves. We would assume that our business would grow. As things stand, though, Simpson said investors are putting too much faith in Congress and the White House to work out a deal, making the stock market a risky proposition.
"The guys who are working and putting to the side are going to make it, and the guys who are just whistling around the market — and I'm not here to dampen that — but holy smoke," he said. "They really believe honestly that no Congress could be this stupid, and by God, they can.". ... Continue to read.
No comments:
Post a Comment