Word: stockings
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...anti-action case: the aftershock of the stock-market quake might tip the U.S. into a recession next year. And that is the wrong time to slash away at the deficit; tax boosts and cuts in Government spending would deepen any slump, because they would reduce the amount of money in consumers' hands. Some worriers go so far as to raise the ghost of Herbert Hoover, who slashed federal spending and persuaded Congress to raise income tax rates sharply in the wake of the 1929 Crash. Says University of Tennessee Economist Paul Davidson: "Cutting the deficit at this particular time...
...very liberal John Kenneth Galbraith wrangled about the size and composition of deficit cuts but not at all about their necessity. In this view, the U.S. has about come to the end of its ability to cover giant budget and trade deficits by borrowing from foreign investors. The stock-market crash served as a warning of what would happen if the foreign capital is ever withdrawn; thus the nation must reduce its dependence on overseas borrowing for the long-term health of the economy, at whatever cost in immediate pain. Says Barry Bosworth of the Brookings Institution: "Risk...
...budget and trade deficits, has continued to attract more sellers than buyers. Central banks have spent something like $90 billion this year buying greenbacks to prop up the price. Worse, the Federal Reserve was forced into the high-interest-rate policy that proved to be poison to world stock markets. And still the Louvre values could not be sustained. ( Last week the dollar fell to new lows against the West German mark and Japanese yen; foreign governments seemed willing to buy only enough U.S. currency to cushion, not stop, the decline...
...between U.S. fiscal and monetary policy and a never before achieved fine tuning of international cooperation. Even then some danger will remain, but it will simply have to be accepted. The deficit is just not sustainable much longer. If it does not give, something else will -- and the stock market has made it all too plain what that something else will...
...France the conservative government of Premier Jacques Chirac took a different kind of stock-market beating. Only two days before Black Monday, the government had successfully completed the $2.6 billion sale of state-owned Compagnie Financiere de Suez, a financial combine. Last week Suez's debut on the battered Paris Bourse was suddenly postponed. Reason: in the continuing stock slump, shareholders would be hit by immediate losses. To cushion the blow, the 1.6 million small investors who bought Suez shares may eventually be allowed to pay in installments...