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U.S. President George Bush says America's economy is facing a "pivotal moment" in a financial crisis that began with risky1 home mortgages now spreading throughout the financial system and eroding2 consumer confidence. VOA White House Correspondent Scott Stearns reports, Mr. Bush wants Congress to buy up securities based on those risky mortgages to protect the nation from "serious risk."
President Bush, flanked by Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, left, and Treasury3 Secretary Henry Paulson, delivers statement about economy, 19 Sep 2008
President Bush says America's free enterprise system rests on the conviction that government should interfere4 in the market only when necessary. Given what he calls the precarious5 state of today's markets, Mr. Bush says that intervention6 is not only warranted, it is essential.
"America's economy is facing unprecedented7 challenges. And we are responding with unprecedented action," the president said.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson Friday outlined a program to buy up bad mortgage-backed securities that he says will cost hundreds of billions of dollars.
The action requires congressional approval, and Paulson briefed leaders on the plan Thursday evening. A top lawmaker on the Senate banking8 committee, Alabama Republican Richard Shelby, says bailing9 out financial markets could cost U.S. taxpayers10 up to one-trillion dollars.
Speaking to reporters in the White House Rose Garden, President Bush says decisive action is needed to preserve America's financial system and sustain the overall economy.
"These measures will require us to put a significant amount of taxpayers' dollars on the line," Mr. Bush said. "This action does entail11 risk, but we expect that this money will eventually be paid back."
The president says the risk of not acting12 would be far higher.
"Further stress on our financial markets would cause massive job losses, devastate13 retirement14 accounts, and further erode15 housing values, as well as dry-up loans for new homes and cars and college tuition," he said. "These are risks that America can not afford to take."
The Bush administration says it will safeguard assets in money market mutual16 funds and has temporarily banned the short-selling of financial company stocks, which allowed traders to bet on those stocks declining in value.
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