Democratic presidential candidate Barack
Obama acknowledges the supporters at the election night rally in Chicago,
the United States, on Nov. 4, 2008, after he won the presidential
election.(Xinhua Photo/Zhang Yan) Photo Gallery>>>
WASHINGTON, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Barack Obama, who has
won Tuesday's U.S. presidential election, will inherit a series of economic
problems on a scale not seen since the Great Depression in the 1930s.
The U.S. economy, struck by the current financial
crisis, contracted in the third quarter of this year at an annual rate of 0.3
percent, signaling the country is likely heading into a recession.
The contraction came as nervous consumers cut back on
their spending by 3.1 percent, the biggest amount since the second quarter of
1980.
It marked the first drop in consumer spending, which
accounts for two thirds of overall economic activity, since late 1991, when the
economy was coming out of a recession.
A recession is under way, but "it's too early to talk
about the depth of the downturn," said economist Victor Zarnowitz of the New
York-based Conference Board, who serves on the NBER committee, which identifies
recessions.
"Some further credit tightening would tip us over
into a more severe recession, but it is too early to tell," he added.
Many economists believe that new coming president's
biggest challenge will be navigating a deep and potentially prolonged economic
downturn.
"We know the challenges that tomorrow will bring are
the greatest of our lifetime -- two wars, a planet in peril, the worst financial
crisis in a century," warned Obama late Tuesday when claiming his election win.
"There are mothers and fathers who will lie awake
after their children fall asleep and wonder how they'll make the mortgage, or
pay their doctor's bills, or save enough for college," he said.
"There's no president in recent history that's had so
many crisis to deal with ... This president's going to have his hands full,"
said Leon Panetta, chief of staff to the last Democratic president, Bill
Clinton.
"The one good thing about the next presidency is,
there's no place to go but up," he joked.
Like Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Ronald Reagan, the
new president will get a rare opportunity to leave a sweeping and long-lasting
imprint on the U.S. economy.
To save the economy from a possible severe recession,
Obama has supported a second stimulus package worth about 150 billion dollars,
though some outside economists are urging them to consider twice that amount.
The package will includes government spending on
public infrastructure, aid to local governments and greater aid to the
unemployed and those on food stamps.
Some economists believe the such a new stimulus
package would have little effect in the current quarter, while some supporters
say it will help pull the economy out of a recession earlier next year and
perhaps mitigate the downturn.
Though a recession will likely dominate Obama's
agenda, other short- and long-term economic challenges will also feature high on
the to-do list, economists and advisers to both candidates said.
Obama has promised to revamp regulations governing
Wall Street, work to bring down the costs of health care, boost indigenous
energy sources, and fight climate change by setting caps on carbondioxide
emissions for big industries.
"To rebuild that middle class, I'll give a tax break
to 95 percent of workers and their families," he wrote in an article published
by The Wall Street Journal recently. "If you work, pay taxes, and make less than
200,000 dollars, you'll get a tax cut," while the wealthy people who earn more
than 250,000 dollars a year, will pay more taxes.
Obama said the reforms will help create two million
new jobs by "rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure and laying broadband lines
that reach every corner of the country."
"I'll invest 15 billion dollars a year over the next
decade in renewable energy, creating five million new, green jobs that pay well,
can't be outsourced, and can help end our dependence on Middle East oil," he
outlined.
Obama is likely to create a vastly larger economic
role for the government and he will also permanently alter the relationship
between financial markets and Washington, finish the job of reshaping the U.S.
banking system, said the U.S. media.
"The next president is going to have to have two
financial SWAT teams," said Barry Eichengreen, professor of economics and
political science at the University of California, Berkeley.
"One to stabilize the crisis and staunch the
bleeding, the other to focus on the issue of how to sustain long-run economic
growth," he said.
Obama also knows the difficulty. "The road ahead will
be long. Our climb will be steep," he said late Tuesday, while assuring his
supporters he will make the success.
"We may not get there in one
year or even one term, but America-- I have never been more hopeful than I am
tonight that we will get there. I promise you -- we as a people will get there,"
said the first black president in the United States.
NEW YORK, Nov. 5 (Xinhua) -- Wall Street
tumbled Wednesday a day after Election Day rally as negative economic data
stirred investors' worries about a possibly severe recession.
ADP Employer Services reported
Wednesday that companies in the U.S. cut 157,000 jobs in October, the most in
nearly six years. The decline was larger than economist previous
estimates. Full
story
WASHINGTON, Oct.
13 (Xinhua) -- U.S. presidential race front-runner Barack Obama on Monday rolled
out what his campaign called a four-part "economic rescue plan" for the middle
class.
"I'm proposing a number of steps
that we should take immediately to stabilize our financial system, provide
relief to families and communities, and help struggling homeowners," Obama said
at a rally in Toledo, Ohio. Full
story