. 24/7 Space News .
No Risk Of Recession After Hurricane Crisis: Bush Advisor

The US Congress has approved more than 62 billion dollars to meet the immediate needs of the relief operation after Hurricane Katrina displaced hundreds of thousands of people from New Orleans and other ruined towns.

Washington (AFP) Sep 28, 2005
The double blows of hurricanes Katrina and Rita will likely shave up to one percentage point off US third-quarter economic growth, without causing a recession, a senior White House advisor said Wednesday.

"There are various estimates about the third quarter ... numbers between half and one percent," said Ben Bernacke, Chairman of the White House chairman of Economic Advisors.

"That will probably leave us a decent rate of growth in the third quarter."

"We see that coming back in the fourth quarter and going onto next year," he said, after a weekly meeting of top Bush administration economic advisors at the White House.

Bernacke said that consumer spending was strong in the United States economy, growth was robust and job creation was good, and noted that some sectors of the economy could see a spike from the post-hurricane rebuilding effort.

"I don't seen any significant risk of a recession," Bernacke said.

Joshua Bolton, chairman of the Office of Management and Budget meanwhile said that despite massive spending on hurricane relief and rebuilding efforts, Bush was still on track to cut the ballooning US deficit in half.

Such progress was dependent however on two factors: responsible spending combined with belt tightening and continued strong economic growth, he said.

The US Congress has approved more than 62 billion dollars to meet the immediate needs of the relief operation after Hurricane Katrina displaced hundreds of thousands of people from New Orleans and other ruined towns.

Bolton said that the administration's spending on the hurricane effort had so far swallowed up about one-third of that amount.

The International Monetary Fund last week concluded the US economy will shrug off Hurricane Katrina's immediate impact but will face longer-run risks from high oil prices, messy public finances and a housing downturn.

The fund predicted the world's biggest economy would expand by 3.5 percent this year and 3.3 percent next.

The bipartisan congressional budget office said on September 7 that Katrina could hit US growth by up to one percentage point.

related report
Port Of New Orleans Operating At 20 Percent Capacity
Washington (AFP) Sep 28 - The Port of New Orleans, a key to US maritime operations, is operating at just 20 percent capacity and needs repairs costing some 1.7 billion dollars, its top executive told Congress Wednesday.

Gary LaGrange, president and chief executive of the port, told the Senate Finance Committee that it would take "months if not years to fully recover" from the storms.

LaGrange said the current estimate is that 1.7 billion dollars will be needed to rehabilitate, replace or improve port facilities damaged by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita in New Orleans alone, with other smaller ports also needing extensive repairs.

"The Port of New Orleans is the primary economic engine for the region - and if the port returns to full operations, the region will soon follow," he said.

"With repaired port and intermodal infrastructure and a return of the workforce, the port will be a major factor in the business and economic revitalization so desperately required for the Gulf Coast region."

LaGrange said that in the meantime, there could be disruptions of shipping not only of petroleum, but of chemicals and a variety of agricultural and industrial goods for the midwest United States.

"These Gulf ports serve as one of the nation's largest gateways for poultry exports, and the inability to handle frozen poultry products through unique dockside facilities would affect the industry worldwide," he said.

"Steel is another commodity handled by the Port of New Orleans. The cost of diverting steel imports from New Orleans would increase the cost of such products by an estimated 80 to 90 dollars per metric ton."

Separately, David Wyss, chief economist at Standard and Poor's, said that while petroleum can be shifted to other ports in many cases, agricultural goods may be problematic.

"The critical time is the beginning of November - that's when the midwest agricultural season begins."

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Loral Reschedules Billion Dollar Debt
New York - Jan 7, 2002
Loral Space & Communications has taken early action to extend to 2005 the maturities of both of its major bank credit facilities, the $600 million Loral SpaceCom facility and the $494 million Loral Satellite facility. In addition, the company obtained significant improvements in the amortization schedules. All lenders agreed to these revised terms which were signed off the day before Christmas.







  • Mathematics Unites The Heavens And The Atom
  • NASA Facilities Weather Hurricane Rita
  • Voyager Finds Three Surprises Near Our Solar System's Edge
  • Marshall Space Flight Center Prepares to Implement Space Exploration Missions

  • Sailing The Planets: Exploring Mars With Guided Balloons
  • NASA To Show Intelligent Space Robots In Action At Ames 'Marscape'
  • Approaching Erebus
  • Deciphering Mars: The Future

  • Moscow, Seoul To Cooperate In Space Exploration
  • Launch Of Russia Rocket Postponed
  • Orbital Successfully Launches Minotaur Rocket Carrying US Military Bird
  • CryoSat Launch Will Be Blast From The Cold War Past

  • Envisat And ERS-2 Reveal Hidden Side Of Hurricane Rita
  • MERIS Monitoring Tracks Planetary Photosynthesis Levels
  • Orbimage Announces Awards Totaling $6.1M Of ClearView Orders From The NGA
  • NASA Technology Monitors Wildlife Habitats From The Air

  • NASA'S Pluto Space Probe Begins Launch Preparations
  • Santa et al
  • Hubble Makes Movie Of Neptune's Dynamic Atmosphere
  • Gemini Samples Spectrum Of 2003 UB313: Pluto-Like Surface

  • Mature Galaxy Found In Early Universe Eight Times More Massive Than Milky Way
  • Tycho's Remnant Provides Shocking Evidence For Cosmic Rays
  • Double Star And Cluster Observe First Evidence Of Crustal Cracking
  • Case Astronomers Find Vast Stellar Web Spun By Colliding Galaxies

  • SMART-1 Set For More Lunar Science
  • Not Your Average Moonshot
  • Digging "Moon Dirt" Is NASA's Fifth Centennial Challenge
  • With Moon Mission, US Seeks To Remain Leader In Space

  • Excalibur Team Successfully Fires GPS-Guided 155mm Artillery Projectile
  • First Modernized GPS Satellite Built By Lockheed Martin Launched
  • Chinese Company Bids For Galileo Operation Franchise
  • Harris Offer Low-Cost Weapon Data Link Used In JDAM Moving Target Demo

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement