Putnam Investments CEO Robert Reynolds Calls for “The New Solvency” to Generate Growth While Closing the Federal Budget D...
November 17 2010 - 8:30AM
Business Wire
How to address the nation’s budget deficit and make Social
Security solvent were among several proposals outlined today by
Robert L. Reynolds, president and chief executive officer of Putnam
Investments, at a speech at the National Press Club in Washington,
D.C. In his remarks, Reynolds, a longtime advocate of reforming the
nation’s public and private retirement systems, outlined a unique
series of reforms he called “The New Solvency” to stimulate job
growth, address the nation’s Social Security shortfall and help
reduce the federal budget deficit.
“Our country is at a historic inflection point between decline
and renewal. We can either keep drifting toward what has been
called the ‘most predictable economic crisis’ in our history –
outright insolvency – or we can act to re-boot our economy and
reclaim our future,” said Reynolds. “I am confident that we can
control our own destiny as a nation, and, through shared sacrifice,
meet the challenges we face by moving toward a new economic model –
a New Solvency – grounded in higher savings and investment,
sustainable growth, new business formation, job creation and fiscal
sustainability.”
The urgency of what Reynolds called for in his remarks is
reflected in the results of a survey of 1,000 Americans conducted
in the past week by Putnam who contracted with Insight Express.
Among the findings of the survey, which Putnam released today:
- Americans were nearly unanimous (95%)
in saying they are concerned about the federal budget deficit, with
three-quarters (72%) saying they are “very” or “extremely”
concerned about the deficit.
- By a three-to-one margin, Americans
prefer to balance the budget by cutting spending instead of raising
taxes; nearly half (45%) said that cutting defense spending was the
single best way to close the federal budget deficit, including a
third (31%) of self-identified Republicans. An additional 20
percent preferred reducing domestic spending and 11 percent
reducing spending for Social Security, Medicare and other
entitlements.
- Balancing the federal budget is
Americans’ top choice among a list of national spending priorities,
chosen by one-third (36 percent), ahead of healthcare reform,
Social Security solvency and fighting terrorism.
- Three-quarters of Americans (72%) said
Social Security is a key source of retirement income for many
millions of working people and must be fixed for the long
term.
- Two-thirds of Americans (70%) think
that a tax incentive to hire American workers would help to
stimulate job growth. Nearly half of those surveyed (49%) support a
10 percent reduction in corporate income taxes for companies that
increase their U.S. workforce by one percent.
Reynolds proposed steps to create jobs and generate economic
growth in the near term and lay the foundation for long-term growth
through tax and regulatory changes within the context of reducing
the deficit. “The proposals by President Obama’s deficit reduction
panel are an important contribution to a national dialogue on how
to balance the budget,” said Reynolds. “Together with steps to
generate jobs and growth – both now and in the long term – deficit
reduction is a means to creating sustainable prosperity for the
American people.”
In his remarks, Reynolds called for complementing deficit
reduction with measures to reform the nation’s public and private
retirement systems, making Social Security solvent and finalizing
proposals to increase private savings through expanded access to
401(k) plans and IRAs. He also proposed measures to create jobs and
support new business formation, such as making federal research and
development tax credits permanent, offering new tax breaks for
depreciation of plants and equipment and new federal corporate tax
credits for companies which hire more U.S.-based workers.
Calling for a fundamental shift from tax policies that encourage
debt and consumption to policies that reward savings, investment
and production, Reynolds also proposed supporting new businesses
through a multi-year holiday on capital gains taxes from any
initial public offering that an investor holds and bringing talent
to America by issuing a 10-year green card to any foreign student
who graduates from a U.S. university and wants to work in this
country.
About Putnam Investments
Founded in 1937, Putnam Investments is a leading global money
management firm with over 70 years of investment experience. The
firm was recently named “Mutual Fund Manager of the Year” by
Institutional Investor. At the end of October 2010, Putnam had $118
billion in assets under management. Putnam has offices in Boston,
London, Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Tokyo, Singapore, and Sydney. For
more information, visit putnam.com.
Putnam mutual funds are distributed by Putnam Retail
Management.
Putnam Tax-Free High Yield Fund Class A (MM) (NASDAQ:PTHAX)
Historical Stock Chart
From Dec 2024 to Jan 2025
Putnam Tax-Free High Yield Fund Class A (MM) (NASDAQ:PTHAX)
Historical Stock Chart
From Jan 2024 to Jan 2025