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THE LAST SUPERPOWER?


Senior Cleric: US Moving towards Global Isolation


Fars News Agency reports: “A senior official at the Islamic Revolution Guards Corps (IRGC) said that the United States’ consecutive failures in the Middle-East and other parts of the world show that Washington is moving towards global isolation.

Representative of the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution to the IRGC Hojjatoleslam Ali Saeedi said in a meeting with members of Tehran’s Voa’z (Preachers) Community that the current and future trend of the US policies and moves shows that Washington is moving towards global isolation.

Saeedi recalled Washington’s challenges in the region, and said, ‘All the US investments in Iraq for interfering in the country’s elections and controlling the country have proved futile due to the vigilance shown by Iraq’s Muslim people’.

As regards Iran’s nuclear rights, Hojjatoleslam Saeedi said that the US was seeking to deprive the Islamic Republic of peaceful nuclear energy but the resistance shown by the Iranian authorities and parliament as well as Iran’s insistence on its nuclear enrichment rights have forced Washington to back off…”


Fed set to downgrade outlook for U.S.


The Financial Times reports: “The Federal Reserve is set to downgrade its assessment of US economic prospects when it meets to discuss ways to reboot the flagging recovery.

Faced with weak economic data and rising fears of a double-dip recession, the Federal Open Market Committee is likely to ensure its policy is not constraining growth and to use its statement to signal greater concern about the economy. It is, however, unlikely to agree big new steps to boost growth.

Smaller measures to help the economy could initially take the form of a decision to reinvest proceeds from maturing mortgage-backed securities held by the US central bank, thereby preventing the Fed’s balance sheet from shrinking naturally.

Investors will also examine closely any changes to the pledge made by the FOMC in June to ‘employ its policy tools as necessary to promote economic recovery and price stability’, which could be hardened if policymakers choose to signal the potential for more aggressive move to boost the economy in the future.

But even if that happens, most economists believe that it would take several more months of poor data for the Fed to actually begin a new round of asset purchases on the scale of those carried out during the recession.

In congressional testimony Ben Bernanke noted ‘unusual uncertainty’ in the economic outlook and in a speech the Fed chairman warned of a ‘considerable way to go’ before the US achieves a full recovery.

Although Fed policymakers still believe the basic trajectory of the economy remains one of moderate expansion, there may be more attention given to heightened dangers of a sharp slowdown. ‘The FOMC will have to tone down its assessment of the economy in view of recent weak indicators on real growth, real consumption spending and employment,’ said Brian Bethune and Nigel Gault, economists at Global Insight.

The latest poor reading came in Friday’s monthly employment report, which showed the US private sector creating only 71,000 jobs in July – not enough to keep up with population growth, let alone bring down the unemployment rate. That followed news a week earlier that growth in US gross domestic product slowed from an annualized rate of 3.7 per cent in the first quarter to 2.4 per cent in the second quarter.

‘Given how low inflation already is, and given the potential for the recovery to falter, we expect Fed officials will highlight downside risks and signal a bias to ease in the FOMC statement,’ said Jim O’Sullivan, chief economist at MF Global…”