LIVING POLITICS
Howard Fineman
In Search of Optimism
A somber gathering of America's elites in Aspen.
Aspen, Colo.—Even in Shangri-La they are worried about the American economy this holiday week.
You don't see the fear at first glance in this wealthy, carefully-tended alpine village. Tiny condos still cost millions and the whine of power saws fills the air along the cottonwood-shaded streets. But you can feel a pervasive unease in the topics and tone of the panel discussions on the outskirts of town at the Aspen Institute Ideas Festival.
In this campaign year, the take-away is clear: Whoever the next president is (and most of the panelists here assume it will be Barack Obama) will face a crushing agenda. A new administration begins with a fund of hope; this next one will need an ocean of it—and will need a Lincolnesque skill, patience and fortitude to bring us through.
Opinion polls are one measure of public mood (which is dour); another is this gathering's schedule. In conference rooms and music tents, experts from business, government and academia are pondering a range of daunting issues, such as national security in an age of terror, the rise of a potentially hostile China and Russia, the burdens of carbon-based energy, the shortcomings of our educational system, global religious conflict, and a pervasive sense that our own political culture is cripplingly unable to deal with such problems.
Typical of the somber mood was a colloquy with Jamie Dimon, the affable grandson of Greek immigrants who runs J.P. Morgan Chase. Walter Isaacson, who runs the institute, rightly introduced Dimon as "the leading financier in the country, if not the world."
In a vast tent filled with 1,000 people, PBS's Charlie Rose led Dimon through a reconstruction of recent near-cataclysms on Wall Street and into a discussion of his view of the economy. As the two were speaking, crude oil was hitting the previously unthinkable level of $142 dollars a barrel and the stock market was officially entering bear territory.
Dimon was personally impressive—perfectly comfortable juggling a hundred global factors at once for his company. But what he had to say about the world was not as reassuring.
"The economy is virtually unfathomable," he began. "I hope we have hit bottom, but I can't really say."
On the upside, he said, we all need to maintain some historical perspective. In 1987, he reminded the crowd, the stock market had dropped 25 percent in one day. The current depressing run was months in the making. Nor is the situation like 1982, when we faced a recession driven by sky-high interest rates. By historical standards, unemployment is relatively low at 5.5 percent (the figure held steady this week.)
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Member Comments
Posted By: wiesci1 @ 07/15/2008 3:52:01 PM
Comment: Bravo HollyROLLER, yOU ARE ABSOLUTELY RIGHT. wE HAVE 4 MONTHS TO ELECTION, MAYBE SOME GOOD CANDIDADTE IS SOMEWERE IN USA. COME ON , INTRUDUCE YOUR SELF !!!
Posted By: HolyRoller @ 07/09/2008 4:32:51 PM
Comment: Now Martin...it is the Hussein camp, that decided to call any and all, critics of their messiah, RACIST. He has alienated a huge part of the DNC, with personal attacks. Now, his camp wants it to end. I consider it my calling, to do whatever I can to show this crook and fraud for what his true being is.
Open your eyes. What do you find so attractive, about Hussein? He has never accomplished anything, in his very short legislative career. He is a fraud.
NOBAMA!!!
Posted By: martin_gray @ 07/09/2008 9:51:25 AM
Comment: Holy Roller, too bad you don't think more Holy thoughts instead of cynicism and sarcasm. Your humor, if it can be called that, is neither amusing or appreciated. Just your usual political attack on all who do not agree with you.