
La plataforma más completa de información y servicios económicos para iPad.
Sudoku: Juega cada día a uno nuevo
El tiempo: Consulta la previsión para tu ciudadNEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. financial system is stabilizing and the government does not plan to tap the remaining $410 billion of a financial rescue fund unless a further need arises, Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson told the Wall Street Journal in an interview published on Tuesday.
Paulson said he was unlikely to use the remains of the $700 billion bailout to launch substantial new programs, preferring to keep money in reserve for unforeseen emergencies and to preserve flexibility for the Obama administration.
"I'm going to do what we need to do to keep the system strong and to react the ways we need to react during the nine weeks I'm here, but I'm not going to be looking to start up new things unless they're necessary or it's just clear that they need to be done or
"I want to preserve the firepower, the flexibility we have now and those that come after us will have."
Paulson could be in for some tough questioning on Capitol Hill later Tuesday after saying last week he no longer planned to buy bad loans from banks and instead would use the congressionally approved bailout to inject capital directly into banks.
Citing comments he prepared for the testimony, the Journal said Paulson plans to say that after investing $250 billion in banks, the Treasury "didn't have enough left to make a meaningful impact."
He told the Journal that he is working with the Federal Reserve to develop a lending facility that would encourage investors to buy some of these assets.
Paulson, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke and Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. Chairman Sheila Bair are scheduled to testify before the U.S. House Financial Services Committee on the Troubled Asset Relief Program at 9:30 a.m. EST..
Separately, in an op-ed piece in the New York Times, Paulson wrote: "If we have learned anything throughout this year, we have learned that this financial crisis is unpredictable and difficult to counteract.
"We decided it was prudent to reserve our TARP money, maintaining not only our flexibility, but also that of the next administration.
(Reporting by Christopher Kaufman)
PUBLICIDAD

Tropas sirias han secuestrado este miércoles a dos agricultores libaneses en la región fronteriza de Al Abboudiyeh...

El Partido de los Trabajadores (PT), en el Gobierno en Brasil, declaró hoy su "total apoyo" al presidente de Venez...

España ...

El aspirante republicano a la presidencia de EEUU, Mitt Romney, ha reducido en más de 10 puntos la distancia en in...
Telefónica tiene la imperiosa necesidad de reducir deuda y movilizará todo lo que esté a su alcance para sanear su...
Salvamento Marítimo ha rescatado a 56 inmigrantes, entre ellos varias mujeres, de una patera que se encontraba a u...
El presidente del grupo bancario español BBVA, Francisco González, afirmó hoy en México que "ha sido un error toda...

El FC Barcelona Regal ha conseguido una importante victoria ante el Valencia Basket (64-80) en 'La Fonteta' de San...
La Plataforma de Organizaciones de Mujeres por la Abolición de la Prostitución ha rechazado este miércoles el veto...

El Catedrático de Estructura Económica de la Universidad Ramón Lull, Santiago Niño Becerra, ha hablado largo y ten...
Noticias más leidas
Noticias más leidas
Noticias más leidas
27 pisos de lujo y diseño en Bombay.


Ecoprensa S.A. - Todos los derechos reservados | Cloud Hosting en Acens