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- <text id=94TT0165>
- <title>
- Feb. 14, 1994: Double Whammy
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 14, 1994 Are Men Really That Bad?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 25
- Double Whammy
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>The Fed raises interest rates as Clinton readies a $1.5 trillion
- budget that contains plenty of pain
- </p>
- <p>By Adam Zagorin/Washington
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Reserve Board is normally the Stealth bomber of
- government agencies, zooming in without warning to raise or
- lower interest rates, and confirming weeks later what action
- was taken. But last Friday, in an extraordinary pre-emptive
- strike against a possible surge of inflation, Federal Reserve
- Chairman Alan Greenspan declared that the central bank had raised
- short-term rates that very day. Although Greenspan had warned
- earlier in the week that an increase was likely, the news sent
- shock waves through Wall Street. The Dow Jones industrial average
- plunged 96.24 points to close Friday at 3871.42 for the sharpest
- sell-off since Nov. 15, 1991.
- </p>
- <p> While some panicky traders took the rate hike as a signal that
- the bull market might be over, other Wall Street watchers shrugged
- off such fears. "The market overreacted," asserted Edward Yardeni,
- chief economist for the investment firm C.J. Lawrence. "It's
- better for the Fed to tighten a little bit now rather than a
- lot later." Yet worried traders and investors remained shaken.
- Said Stan Weinstein, a stock market analyst and newsletter publisher
- in Hollywood, Florida: "The market is going to be awfully nervous
- next week."
- </p>
- <p> The Federal Reserve action highlighted the growing strength
- of the U.S. economy as Bill Clinton prepared to unveil a new
- budget filled with painful spending cuts this week. Greenspan's
- announcement came after the Commerce Department reported that
- sales of new homes climbed 11.4% in December to the highest
- level in seven years. Factories have also been humming: Commerce
- said new orders rose for the fifth straight month in December,
- and a survey of private purchasing managers found that the advances
- continued in January. While the unemployment rate rose to 6.7%
- in January from 6.4% in December, that reflected a change in
- the method of calculating the rate. Under the old method, joblessness
- would have fallen to 6.3% last month.
- </p>
- <p> The resurgent recovery has increased tax revenues and helped
- the Administration reduce the federal budget deficit to a surprising
- extent. Just one year ago, the Congressional Budget Office projected
- a whopping $284 billion shortfall for fiscal 1995, which begins
- next October, and $287 billion for fiscal 1996. But last month
- the nonpartisan CBO predicted the budget gap would narrow to
- $166 billion in 1996. That would trim the deficit to just 2.2%
- of the country's gross domestic product, the lowest level since
- 1979. "Clinton's tax increases and spending cuts are largely
- responsible," says CBO director Robert Reischauer. "We have
- taken an important step along the road to fiscal responsibility."
- </p>
- <p> Clinton's new budget is even tougher than last year's. To comply
- with spending caps enacted in 1990 and reinforced last August,
- Clinton aims to slash outlays for nine of 14 federal departments,
- ranging from Education to Agriculture. That will distribute
- tens of billions of dollars in budget cuts over some 300 government
- programs. More than 100 others would be eliminated outright,
- stretching from a Commerce Department undersea research project
- to a program aimed at helping keep students from dropping out
- of school.
- </p>
- <p> At the Pentagon, which absorbs roughly one out of every five
- federal dollars, the leadership of all three services has braced
- for draconian cuts. Only a week before Defense Secretary Les
- Aspin was fired in December, officials confirmed that current
- funding would fall $50 billion short of supporting the force
- levels Clinton has called for through 1999. Indeed, Clinton's
- budget slashes $1.4 billion in defense procurement programs,
- almost half the overall $3.25 billion in cuts the President
- is recommending. But the proposals will encounter strenuous
- opposition from congressional Republicans and such leading Democrats
- as Sam Nunn of Georgia, who chairs the Senate Armed Services
- Committee.
- </p>
- <p> Reductions in cherished social programs will be just as tough
- for many Clintonites to swallow. As Cabinet Secretaries have
- trooped into the Oval Office to meet with the President in recent
- weeks, each has faced major disappointments. To raise extra
- cash to finance AIDS research, childhood immunizations, Head
- Start and increased job training, Clinton plans to reduce funding
- for everything from public housing to mass transit to assistance
- for the poor to help heat their homes. All told, the budget
- calls for 118,000 fewer civilian workers on the federal payroll
- by Sept. 30, 1995, than when Clinton took office.
- </p>
- <p> Many legislators want the cuts to go deeper still. The Senate
- is poised to take a fresh look at a hardy perennial when it
- debates a balanced-budget amendment later this month. While
- a comparable measure was defeated in 1986, this one has gained
- public support around the country and could stand a better chance.
- Meanwhile, deficit hawks led by Democratic Senator Bob Kerrey
- of Nebraska plan to propose more than $100 billion in spending
- cuts next month. A similar package failed in the House last
- year by only six votes.
- </p>
- <p> Any long-term attack on the deficit must include a healthy economy
- that can keep profits and incomes rising and a strong stream
- of revenues flowing into government coffers. In moving to raise
- interest rates last week, the Federal Reserve wagered in effect
- that an increase now would prevent the economy from overheating
- and maintain inflation at its current modest level of about
- 3%. That combination of sustainable growth and stable prices
- could be a deficit buster's best friend.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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