June 18, 2009 6:26 PM

Bush Defends Free Market Amidst Crisis

(AP)  President Bush asserted Thursday that the global financial crisis is "not a failure of the free market" and urged world leaders to adopt modest financial reforms that stop short of the tighter regulations Europeans favor.

"Our aim should not be more government. It should be smarter government," Mr. Bush said during a speech in New York, a day before about two dozen world leaders converge on Washington for a weekend summit he is hosting.

Mr. Bush called on the leaders to embrace "reasonable" reforms, saying changes won't work if they shun the free market system or restrict trade.

The president delivered a vigorous defense of free-market capitalism and easier global trade to frame his approach to the high-level gathering. Mr. Bush invited representatives of some of the world's biggest industrial democracies, emerging nations and international bodies to Washington to start developing a more coordinated world response to the economic woes that have millions of people struggling to keep their jobs, their homes and their hopes.

With the severe economic downturn threatening to end Mr. Bush's tenure on a sour note before President-elect Barack Obama takes over, he will host the leaders at a White House dinner Friday and review causes and solutions for the financial mess Saturday.

It was fitting that Mr. Bush's argument against regulatory overreach was delivered not in Washington but from the heart of Wall Street. He spoke at venerable Federal Hall, which was home to the first Congress and is within shouting distance of New York Stock Exchange.

Mr. Bush called for reforms to strengthen the global economy long-term and said leaders at this weekend's meeting would "discuss specific actions we can take."

Among the areas for possible agreement, Mr. Bush listed:

  • Bolstering accounting rules for stocks, bonds and other investments so investors have a clearer sense of the true value of what they buy.

  • Requiring "credit default swaps" - a type of corporate debt insurance - to be processed through a central clearinghouse. That would help provide crucial information on the parties involved in these complex, unregulated products. Prices for this insurance soared in the aftermath of the Lehman Brothers' bankruptcy and imperiled American International Group, a major insurer of this kind of corporate debt.

  • Taking a fresh look at rules aimed at preventing fraud and manipulation in trading of stocks and other securities.

  • Better coordinating financial regulations among countries.

  • Giving a wider variety of countries voting power at the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.


  • Notably absent from his speech was any talk about what the U.S. might do to bail out the troubled auto industry or the debate over a second U.S. stimulus package.

    "The crisis was not a failure of the free market system," Mr. Bush said. "And the answer is not to try to reinvent that system."

    But Mr. Bush's argument that "government intervention is not a cure-all" came as some critics think his administration already is overstepping in private markets. The federal dollars being spent or put on the line to rebuild the nation's financial system could easily run into the trillions. Already the Bush administration has enacted a $700 financial rescue package, backed the purchase of investment bank Bear Stearns, bought stock in leading banks, engineered a government takeover of mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, guaranteed money market fund holdings and funneled billions to stabilize troubled insurance giant American International Group.

    "I'm a market-oriented guy, but not when I'm faced with the prospect of a global meltdown," Mr. Bush said.

    At the same time, the president aggressively defended the U.S. against charges from around the world that insufficient U.S. regulation led to the credit collapse worldwide. This was his way of pushing back against both the criticism and the calls by allies for more intrusive rules. Heading into the meeting, Europeans are seen as looking more urgently for broad changes and tighter universal banking regulations than is the United States.

    "Many European countries had much more extensive regulations and still experienced problems almost identical to our own," Mr. Bush said.

    Some critics have said that lax oversight by U.S. and other regulators failed to detect problems and respond with action that could have prevented the meltdown. The crisis began with the collapse of the U.S. housing market, which froze credit, then shook the broader financial sector and finally rippled overseas.

    "History has shown that the greater threat to economic prosperity is not too little government involvement in the market, it is too much government involvement in the market," he said. "It would a terrible mistake to allow a few months of crisis to undermine 60 years of success."

    Dan Price, Mr. Bush's deputy national security adviser for international economic affairs, rejected suggestions of discord with other nations and said it was "grossly inaccurate" to suggest the U.S. was not taking a firm lead in reform.

    "We are no less committed to fixing the problems, and addressing regulatory and other deficiencies, than any other leader," he said.

    While in New York, the president addressed a conference at the United Nations on religious tolerance and met privately with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.

    The summit is just the first in a series intended to deal with the enormity of the economic meltdown, and the next meeting won't be until after Bush leaves office on Jan. 20.

    In the United States alone, the nation's jobless ranks zoomed past 10 million last month, the most in a quarter-century, as 240,000 more people lost jobs. In the latest dire sign, American automakers say they are struggling to survive.

    Mr. Obama is steering clear of the summit but will have a couple representatives available to meet with leaders on his behalf.

    Besides the United States, the countries represented will be Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, South Korea and Turkey. Those countries and the European Union make up the so-called G-20.

    © 2009 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
    Add a Comment See all 67 Comments
    by birdyspice7 November 14, 2008 8:44 PM EST
    "Conservatives are failures and buffoons."
    Posted by jumkey at 08:07 PM : Nov 13, 2008

    "yet we are the ones that can pay our mortgages"

    Funny.. I seem to remember that the biggest blue areas of the nation are also the richest. In California alone, the bay area boasts the highest salaries per capita and we vote democrat while it is the poor areas out in the valley who vote Republican.

    Oh. and 87% or professors would call themselves "liberal".

    Interesting.
    Reply to this comment
    by birdyspice7 November 14, 2008 8:38 PM EST
    AND-- why did we kill the electric car all those years ago?

    You should see the documentary "who killed the electric car". We could have been so many years ahead by now.
    Reply to this comment
    by birdyspice7 November 14, 2008 8:36 PM EST
    If Bush truly wants to defend free market principles, then why do we continue to demand that imported cars that are green, lower their standards to those of American manufacturers?

    Smart cars, Prius, and others, are released into other countries with better gas mileage and less emissions. But we, the United States, have them lower these standards because it''s UNFAIR to u.s. car companies.

    That doesn''t sound like free market to me. The philosophy of capitalism is that products will be better because of competition but we''ve taken the competition out of it, haven''t we?
    Reply to this comment
    by treknutz November 14, 2008 7:55 PM EST
    Bush Defends Free Market Amidst Crisis:

    As long as the Free Market is George Bush giving as much of our money to his cronies as possible before he leaves office.

    What makes me maddest is congress is letting him do it. It is never too late to IMPEACH but Nancy has no gonads...I have to give Sarah credit for at least some persistance...even though she is banging her head on an iceberg!
    Reply to this comment
    by mumu11 November 14, 2008 2:00 PM EST
    Herbert is his Dad''s middle name. Is this why W takes his cues from not-so-regretted president Herbert Hoover?
    Reply to this comment
    by poradicus November 14, 2008 8:30 AM EST
    I feel soo dumb voting for Bush two times, though it''s not entirely my fault I voted for the nut-job. Remember he promised us a lot of stuff and failed to do so, and Kerry wasn''t doing much I didn''t know who to vote for but Bush in 2004. I woke up the next day after Bush won election and took a deep breath hoping he will change his policies for the 4 more years, but they never changed and he is a big liar. I hate it when people lie ooh well, I''m hoping Obama will be like FDR and help curve this disaster were in right now thanks to Bush and his silly administrationn full of money-stealing crooks. Ronald Raegan will surely call Bush Blasphemy for what he did to the American people and caused even Mccain to lose cause of Bush''s stupidity. It will be a while before people will see some opportunity for the Republicans but now Bush disgraced it and I am ashamed what he has been doing in the White House....
    Reply to this comment
    by kansas1946 November 14, 2008 1:19 AM EST
    Conservatives are failures and buffoons.


    Posted by jumkey at 08:07 PM : Nov 13, 2008

    yet we are the ones that can pay our mortgages


    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Posted by jamesm12341 at 08:30 PM : Nov 13, 2008
    + report abuse
    *****************************

    Hmmmm..I was a big Obmam supporter and I am not having the least bit of problem with my mortgage. Any of them, considering I have mortages on a number os pieces of real estate. You class envy argument just ain''t going to cut it anymore.
    Reply to this comment
    by kansas1946 November 14, 2008 1:17 AM EST
    And the best part is he''''s a Harvard MBA. Wow.


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    Posted by clathrate at 09:09 PM : Nov 13, 2008
    ***********************************

    A Harvard degree bought and paid for by his dad. This guy couldn''t get through junior college on his own.
    Reply to this comment
    by mordyo November 14, 2008 1:17 AM EST
    to whom who Wrote " so ... you''''''''re an ''''''''its all clintons fault'''''''' type ... this expains a lot. if what he did was soooo bad ... then why didn''''''''t the republicans who controlled congress between 1994 and 2001 stop him from doing this? or even better ... after 2001 ... why didn''''''''t the republicans ... who had complete control of the federal govt. for six whole years ... fix it?"

    I GOTTA ADD ONE LOGICAL THING HERE. YOUR ARGUMENT LEAVES YOU WITH ONE OF 2 OPTIONS

    1. YOU DISAGREE WITH BUSH PUTTING A SOCIAL AGENDA BEFORE COMMON SENSE ECONOMICS, THEN DISAGREE WITH CLINTON AS WELL

    2. YOU AGREE WITH CLINTON ON HIS ECONOMIC POLICY IN THIS AREA AND THEN YOU ARE FORCED TO AGREE WITH BUSH WHO CONT. THE SAME POLICY...WHICH OPTION WOULD YOU LIKE TO PICK?
    Reply to this comment
    by kansas1946 November 14, 2008 1:16 AM EST
    "Our aim should not be more government. It should be smarter government," Mr. Bush said during a speech in New York, a day before about two dozen world leaders converge on Washington for a weekend summit he is hosting.
    ***********************************

    LMAO. Is this guy something...
    Reply to this comment
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