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Bush: US Economy Being Helped by Falling Energy Prices
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?r=279&c=646344&l=1009&ctl=144863E:A6F02AD83191E160D9382473492334789574F7DCC14957C0 US president says
he is pleased with America's economic progress and will continue to
work to create a positive environment for entrepreneurs U.S. President
George Bush says falling energy prices are helping America's economy.
VOA White House Correspondent Scott Stearns reports, while the stock
market is reaching record highs, new economic figures show a slowdown
in U.S. job growth.







Geroge Bush, right, speaks about the economy as Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson looks on during visit to a Federal Express shipping
facility in Washington President Bush says he is pleased with
America's economic progress and will continue to work to create a
positive environment for entrepreneurs.

"Government will help you as opposed to impede your ability to expand
your company. And the entrepreneurial spirit is strong in America. Our
economy is strong," he said.

Mr. Bush told workers at a package delivery company in the nation's
capital that his administration has helped the economy by lowering
regulation, opening overseas markets, protecting intellectual property
rights and cutting taxes.

Lower energy costs are helping small business owners, and the
president says there was more good news in new economic figures
showing nationwide unemployment falling to 4.6 percent.

But those figures also show only 51,000 new jobs in September. That
was below Wall Street estimates and is the smallest growth in a year.
Most analysts say the U.S. economy needs to add at least 100,000 jobs
each month just to absorb new workers entering the labor market.

Leaders of the president's Republican Party hope that falling gasoline
prices and a record-breaking rally in America's key average of
industrial stocks will translate into voter support for Republican
candidates in congressional and gubernatorial elections less than five
weeks away.

But public opinion polls show much of the good economic news is being
overshadowed by concerns about the war in Iraq and scandals involving
Republican members of Congress, the most recent being allegations that
Republican leaders ignored information that a Republican congressman
sent sexually explicit messages to a teenage boy, who had served as a
congressional page.

When asked who voters thought would do a better job handling the
economy, an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll says 35 percent of
Americans chose opposition Democrats. Twenty-nine percent chose
Republicans.