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Books, Arts. Movies & Misc.: NEWSWEEK Cover: I Got It Bad
NEWSWEEK Cover: I Got It Bad
NEWSWEEK Cover: I Got It Bad
In
the February 2 issue of Newsweek (on newsstands January 26), "I Got It
Bad (And That Ain't Good)," Newsweek's Fareed Zakaria writes about the
challenges President Obama will face in order to fix the economy and
restore America's credibility. Plus: Daniel Gross on our "Yes, We Can"
president in a "No, We Can't" economy; Somali-Americans recruited for
jihad; what makes some people survive; what Obama's presidency means
for racial equality; and Newsweek's Oscar Roundtable with six Hollywood
stars.(PRNewsFoto/NEWSWEEK)
NEW YORK, NY UNITED STATES
President Obama Needs To Act Quickly and on a Massive Scale To Fix the Economy
"We Have Not Turned the Corner. In Fact, We Can't Even See the Corner Right Now."
NEW YORK, Jan. 25 /PRNewswire/ -- In an essay opening the February 2
Newsweek cover package, "I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)" (on newsstands
Monday, January 26), Newsweek International Editor Fareed Zakaria writes that
President Barack Obama will have to quickly start planning for a set of more
extraordinary measures to pull the United States out of its current,
unsustainable economic condition. "The American financial system is
effectively broken. Major banks are moving toward insolvency, and credit
activity remains extremely weak. As long as the financial sector remains
moribund, American consumers and companies -- who collectively make up 80
percent of GDP -- will not have access to credit, and economic activity cannot
really resume on any significant scale. We have not turned the corner. In
fact, we can't even see the corner right now," he writes.
"President Obama faces a terrible dilemma. He needs to act quickly and on
a massive scale," Zakaria writes. Without large scale action, the financial
system will keep bleeding, but the American public believes that we have
already spent far too much on bailing out the banks. Zakaria argues that the
economic fact is that we have not spent enough. Even worse, "this current
crisis has resulted in a deep erosion of American power that we have not fully
understood. Even in the depths of the Iraq War, when much of the globe was
enraged by George W. Bush's unilateralism, people everywhere believed that the
United States had the world's most advanced economy and that its capital
markets in particular were the most sophisticated and developed." That system
is now seen across the world as a sham, and the attitudes of officials and
businessmen range from shock to rage at what they see in the United States.
"When he began his run for the White House, Barack Obama thought he could
restore American power and leadership by righting our foreign policy, winding
down the Iraq War, closing Guantanamo, ending torture. These are all important
policies, and I am glad that he is pursuing them. But right now, the most
important way for him to restore America's credibility and influence in the
world is to rescue the American model," Zakaria writes.
Also in the cover package, Senior Editor Daniel Gross writes how more and
more companies and firms are deciding to forgo the work of restructuring their
finances, and instead selling off their inventory and closing. "Rather than
soldier on, many operators have opted to simply fold, returning money to
investors. Companies, homeowners and money managers willing to quit rather
than fight is both a symptom of the nation's deep economic woes and emblematic
of the challenge the Obama administration faces," Gross writes. "Our 'Yes,
We Can' president is going to have to fix a 'No, We Can't' economy."
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