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Palace welcomes U.S. Congress approval of $ 700-B financial bailout plan
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Oct 4, 2008 - 9:20:55 AM

By Zorayda S. Tecson

MANILA, Oct. 05 (PNA) -- Malacanang on Saturday welcomed the approval of the United States Congress of the US$ 700- billion financial bailout plan, that "signals a start of a long process of economic recovery, on which confidence has been badly shaken by the financial turmoil."

This was stated by Press Secretary Jesus Dureza, adding that like all other countries, the Philippines will have to continue to brace itself to weather this financial crisis.

He said that while President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has already set in place some economic fundamentals that helped the country ride the storm, "we, nonetheless, should all continue to stay the course."

"It will still be a long road to normalcy but our unity and the resilience of the country's economy will surmount this current economic challenge as it did many instances in the past," he said.

The President, in her earlier statements, said with the recent development in the U.S. economy, ”this is really a time of global uncertainty.”

However, she noted the government have been working tirelessly to address challenges resulted from the global economic slowdown as aggravated with the continuing increase in the oil and food prices.

The Chief Executive said that the government is doubling efforts to strengthen the country’s banking system, following the collapse of some investment companies firms in the US.

“On the same token, we are working hard to strengthen the banking system, improve our fiscal health, encourage investment to sustain our economic growth and to insulate our economy from volatility in world markets,” she said.

After two weeks of debates, the U.S. Congress has passed and President George Bush signed a massive plan to save their financial industry and the economy as well.

With 263-171 votes, the U.S. Congress approved the $ 700 billion financial rescue plan in an effort to warrant any pending economic collapse.

Earlier, despite urgent pleas from Bush and his senior financial advisers and the support of congressional leaders, the House voted 228-205 to reject the rescue plan.

However, the U.S. Senate, shortly before it recessed for the election, stepped in, voting 74-25 for a package that linked the rescue bill to a giant bill extending popular tax breaks such as the research-and-development tax credit, providing incentives for renewable energy resources and giving tax relief to disaster victims. (PNA)



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