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Stiglitz Says U.S. Faces `Anemic Recovery,' Needs More Stimulus

bloomberg.com — Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph E. Stiglitz said the U.S. economy faces an “anemic recovery” and the government will need to enact another round of “better designed” stimulus measures.

The Obama administration took “a big gamble and it doesn’t look like it’s paying off,” Stiglitz told Bloomberg TV in an interview in Sydney yesterday. “The recovery is so weak that it is not strong enough to generate new jobs for the new entrants in the labor force, let alone to find jobs for the 15 million Americans who would like a job and can’t get one.”

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CEO Pay Has `Catch' as Executive Performance Targets Prevail, Hewitt Says

bloomberg.com — More companies are linking future stock and cash bonuses to specific targets, according to a study of 157 companies in the Fortune 250 released today by Hewitt Associates Inc., a Lincolnshire, Illinois-based human resources consultant. Thirty- five percent of companies in the Fortune 250 had performance plans in place in 2009 compared with 18 percent in 2003.

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Senate Debate Looms on Tax Cuts for Rich

nytimes.com — Senate leaders said Wednesday that debate would most likely begin in September over whether to let the Bush income tax cuts for the rich expire at the end of this year as scheduled, setting up a new battle just weeks before the midterm elections.

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Reid Plans September Showdown on Extension of Tax Cuts

thehill.com — Senate Democrats will hold a September showdown over trillions of dollars in expiring tax cuts passed under President George W. Bush.

Senior Democrats had expected the controversial issue to be postponed until after the election, but Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.) plans to bring it up when lawmakers return from a five-week August recess.

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Small Business Bill Appears to Be Stuck in Senate

mcclatchydc.com — The U.S. Senate might leave town this week without finishing up what Democrats had hoped would be a significant political achievement before the August recess: passing a multibillion-dollar swath of programs to help struggling small businesses.

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Foreclosed On—By the U.S.

online.wsj.com — James Currell is struggling to prevent his Minnesota home from being foreclosed. But his lender isn't a bank. It is the U.S. government.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York is facing the prospect of foreclosing on a number of properties in the coming months, from homes to commercial buildings, a result of a souring mortgage portfolio it took over when it helped bail out Bear Stearns in 2008.

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U.S. Consumer Bankruptcies May Exceed 1.6 Million, Report Says

bloomberg.com — U.S. consumer bankruptcies, after rising 9 percent last month from June, might exceed 1.6 million this year, according to the American Bankruptcy Institute.

The 137,698 bankruptcy filings in July also represent a 9 percent increase from a year earlier, the institute said yesterday in a statement posted on its website, citing data from the National Bankruptcy Research Center.

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New Democratic Strategy for Creating Jobs Focuses on a Boost in Manufacturing

washingtonpost.com — President Obama and congressional Democrats -- out of options for another quick shot of stimulus spending to revive the sluggish economy -- are shifting toward a longer-term strategy that promises to tackle persistently high unemployment by engineering a renaissance in American manufacturing.

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Maine, Pain Drive Senate Vote Today

politico.com — The $26.1 billion package will likely rise or fall on the vote of Maine Republican Sen. Susan Collins but the spending cuts are also a big part of the story as Majority Leader Harry Reid (D—Nev.) tries to unite his caucus and take away the “deficit and debt” arguments of the GOP.

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Tax Cuts and Tanks Require Real Money

voices.washingtonpost.com — The issue isn't that conservatives don't care about the deficit. We don't really know whether Republicans care about the deficit. They say they do, and they would certainly prefer to reduce the deficit than give people health-care coverage or keep states from firing 500,000 employees. The issue is that they care about tax cuts and defense spending more. If they weren't interested in cutting taxes or purchasing lots of tanks, their deficit record might be quite good. But as it is, every time they get power, they focus on tax cuts and defense spending, and because you can cut a lot more taxes and spend a lot more on defense if you don't have to pay for any of it, they add both of them to the deficit.

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