Posted tagged ‘Wants’

Key House Dem Wants Answers on Recovery.gov Errors

November 18, 2009

ABC News’ Rick Klein reports:

Errors in data tracking job creation under the stimulus are prompting bipartisan blowback on Capitol Hill.

Hours after ABC's Jonathan Karl reported on government data showing hundreds of created jobs and millions of dollars spent in congressional districts that don't exist, House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., late Monday issued a blistering statement demanding an immediate fix to “ludicrous mistakes” on the Recovery.gov Website.

“The inaccuracies on recovery.gov that have come to light are outrageous and the Administration owes itself, the Congress, and every American a commitment to work night and day to correct the ludicrous mistakes,” Obey said. “Credibility counts in government and stupid mistakes like this undermine it. We've got too many serious problems in this country to let that happen.”

“Whether the numbers are good news or bad news, I want the honest numbers and I want them now,” Obey continued.

The revelation about the jobs in phantom districts comes in advance of a Thursday hearing in front of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, where Earl Devaney, chairman of the Recovery Accountability and Transparency Board, can expect sharp questions from Republicans who have been critical of the administration's job-creation statistics.

Another hiccup in advance of that hearing: The administration was forced to slice 60,000 jobs from its most recent report on stimulus spending because of what officials deemed to be “unrealistic data” flowing in from stimulus recipients, according to ABC's Matt Jaffe.

Rep. Darrell Issa, R-Calif., the oversight committee's ranking member, is calling on the board to add a disclaimer to the Web site, if board members say they can't certify the accuracy of the figures.

Geithner Wants ‘Very Substantial’ Changes in Wall Street Compensation

May 26, 2009

ABC News’ Matthew Jaffe and Rick Klein report: Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner said in an interviewing airing this weekend that he wants to see “very, very substantial change” in executive compensation practices on Wall Street, and said he will unveil the administration’s plan for reforms “within weeks.”

“I don’t think we can go back to the way it was,” Geithner said in an interview on Bloomberg TV’s “Political Capital with Al Hunt.” “That would not be responsible for us, not good for our financial system. So I think we’re going to need to see very, very substantial change in practice.”

“We want to start the process of putting in place ‘say on pay’ type requirements and broader standards that supervisors look at to make sure that the incentive structures that compensation creates don’t overwhelm the checks and balances in the system again,” he said.

Earlier this week Geithner had said the government should not set compensation caps, but rather put in place “broad constraints” that emphasize long-term incentives, not short-term ones, to prevent excessive risk-taking.

The administration’s compensation plan is only one of many upcoming changes, he noted.

“We’re going to probably propose substantial changes in the existing framework, because, again, our framework is designed for a different financial system a long time ago,” Geithner said. “It has not kept pace with change. It’s too complex. There are too many regulators, and there are too many gaps in the system. So we’re likely to propose pretty significant changes across the board.”

One reform the administration has called for is the establishment of a systemic risk regulator. A white paper on this issue, Geithner said, will be released “in the next several weeks.”

In the interview with Hunt, Geithner also expressed concern about big banks repaying TARP funds too quickly and then coming back to the government for more help in the future.

“I think that’s a real concern, but I think we’re going to be very careful to make sure that we reduce the incentives for that to happen,” the Treasury chief said.

A number of major banks, such as JP Morgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley, have all reportedly applied to pay back the TARP money. But Geithner noted that financial institutions can only pay back the money if they meet certain requirements.

“We’re saying, in order to repay, it’s important you really have a lot of capital above what you need, but also that you demonstrate that you can go issue unguaranteed debt in the markets today on a substantial scale, because we want to see proof that the market is going to judge you strong enough to do that on your own. And those are important conditions.”

However, Geithner cautioned that the government could not require these banks to boost lending.

“It’s very hard for the government of the United States to force banks to lend,” he said.

“Lots of countries have got themselves in deep trouble with policies that force their banks to lend,” he added. “That’s likely to lead to a weaker, less efficient banking system, less efficient economy. What I think we need to do is make sure they have the capacity to lend.”

In the interview, Geithner was asked about Republican claims that the Obama administration was leading the country towards socialism, claims he vigorously refuted.

“I think it’s the least plausible charge anybody could say about what this president is trying to do in terms of policy,” he stated. “I mean, I think if you look at the range of things he’s proposed and he’s started putting in place, there is a deep appreciation and recognition that we need the markets to work, that growth and productivity depends on the markets working.”

Senator Wants Government Action on Citigroup Jet

January 27, 2009

ABC News’ Z. Byron Wolf Reports: If Timothy Geithner can get the Senate to confirm him despite the moral oddity of having a Treasury Secretary who didn’t pay all his taxes, he’ll take charge to cries from lawmakers that he address the hypocrisy of a bank being kept afloat with $45 billion in taxpayer money buying a new corporate jet.

Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., a chief backer of the U.S. auto industry in Congress, has seen the NY Post report that executives from Citigroup, the beleaguered bank that took $45 billion in taxpayer TARP money, have ok’ed the purchase of a new $50 million corporate jet, and he’s fumed.

Detroit automakers CEOs were lambasted for their use of corporate jets even before Congress rejected giving the auto makers a bailout – the Bush administration provided loans from TARP funds to keep Chrysler and GM afloat.

?The notion of Citigroup spending $50 million on a new corporate jet, even as it is depending on billions of taxpayer dollars to survive, does not fly,” said Levin in a paper statement.

?To permit Citigroup to purchase a plush plane ? foreign-built no less ? while domestic auto companies are being required to sell off their jets is a ridiculous double standard,” said Levin, who has contacted Geithner to do something about the Citigroup jet. Presumably, since Geithner is in charge of administering TARP funds, he would hold some leverage over Citigroup.

?I have urged Tim Geithner, who will presumably be Treasury Secretary by the end of the day, to do what he can to stop this absurdity from occurring, and I am assured he will look into the matter promptly ,” Levin said.

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