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CORRECTED - WRAPUP 4-Obama: costly stimulus needed to jolt U.S. economy

Mon Nov 24, 2008 4:53pm EST

(Corrects paragraph three to show U.S. stocks pared gains and did not fall, the error also occurred in Wrapup 3)

Stocks  |  Regulatory News  |  Bonds

*Geithner, Summers get official nod

*Obama wants economic package passed quickly

*Obama says automakers must present more detailed plan

By Jeff Mason and Ross Colvin

CHICAGO, Nov 24 (Reuters) - President-elect Barack Obama promised on Monday to jolt the faltering U.S. economy with a costly stimulus package next year and introduced the team that will help him navigate the global financial crisis.

Obama, who warned again that the economy would likely get worse before it got better, declined to put a price tag on the two-year stimulus proposal which other Democrats have estimated at hundreds of billions of dollars.

U.S. stocks pared gains as traders lamented Obama's refusal to specify a figure. The president-elect also indicated he had not decided whether to roll back President George W. Bush's 2001 tax cuts for the wealthy early or simply allow them to expire at the end of 2010 as scheduled.

Obama said his team was already working on the details of a package to save or create 2.5 million jobs and urged the next Congress to act on it immediately in early January.

"We have to make sure that the stimulus is significant enough that it really gives a jolt to the economy," he said, describing its price only as costly.

"I want to see it enacted right away. It is going to be of a size and scope that is necessary to get this economy back on track."

Obama had harsh words for the struggling U.S. auto industry, acknowledging he did not want the sector to fail but criticizing company executives for failing to present a clear recovery plan when they testified before Congress last week.

Obama, who takes over from Bush on Jan. 20, confirmed his economic team at the news conference.

Timothy Geithner, 47, president of the New York Federal Reserve Bank, will become Treasury secretary, and Lawrence Summers, 53, a former Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton, will be director of the National Economic Council.

They did not speak at the event, which Vice President-elect Joe Biden also attended.

Obama said the country would see a substantial budget deficit next year, which he described as "bigger than we've seen in a very long time."

"American taxpayers are understandably concerned, if we already have a big deficit, and now we're added an additional stimulus, how are we going to pay for all that?" he said.

"The right answer is that we have to first focus on getting the economy back on track."

Obama said he would discuss steps toward a "sustainable and responsible budget scenario" at a news conference on Tuesday at which he is expected to announce further members of his economic team.

"We'll have to scour our federal budget, line by line, and make meaningful cuts and sacrifices, as well, something I'll be discussing further tomorrow," he said.

DISAPPOINTMENT IN AUTOMAKERS

Obama supports a bailout for Detroit automakers but said he was disappointed that the chief executives for General Motors Inc., Ford Motor Co., and Chrysler LLC did not present a concrete plan in their testimony before Congress.

"I think Congress did the right thing, which is to say, 'You guys need to come up with a plan and come back before you are going to get any taxpayer money,'" he said.

Obama has kept a low public profile since his Nov. 4 victory over Republican John McCain, remaining in Chicago to pick his Cabinet but not formally announcing any of his choices. Geithner was the first official Cabinet announcement.

U.S. stocks rallied late on Friday after news leaks about Geithner's appointment. They rose again on Monday after the U.S. government agreed to inject $20 billion of new capital into Citigroup Inc., but fell during the press conference.

U.S. government bonds edged up from their lows from the day as stocks pared their gains. The dollar, broadly lower against most currencies, strengthened a bit against the euro.

Obama also named University of California, Berkeley, economics professor Christina Romer to head his Council of Economic Advisors and Melody Barnes to head his Domestic Policy Council. Barnes, a former chief counsel on the Senate Judiciary Committee, was a policy advisor to Obama's presidential campaign.

Summers is also a possible successor to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, whose term ends in January 2010.

In Washington, Bush said the government stood ready to help the banking system as it did with Sunday's Citigroup deal.

Bush, speaking after a meeting with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, said said he had also spoken with Obama about the Citigroup rescue and promised to inform the incoming president and his economic team of any future major decisions.

(Additional reporting by Caren Bohan and Andy Sullivan, editing by David Wiessler)



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