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Friday, March 19, 2010

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Buffett, Gates agree about rebound

ASSOCIATED PRESS

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NEW YORK — Capitalism is still alive and well, say the world’s two richest men, despite lingering shocks from the longest, deepest recession since the Great Depression.

“The financial panic is behind us,” said famed investor Warren E. Buffett, who recently made what he called an “all-in wager” on the U. S. economy by acquiring railroad Burlington Northern Santa Fe. “The bottom has come in stocks. Don’t pass on something that’s attractive today.”

Sitting facing each other in an auditorium filled with nearly 1,000 cheering people at Columbia University, the chief executive officer of Berkshire Hathaway and Microsoft founder Bill Gates fielded questions from Columbia Business School students on the recession, investing and what’s next for Microsoft.

There were, at first, reassurances that the U. S. economy had not collapsed since the last time the two sat in front of a student audience, in Nebraska in 2005.

“We proved that we can make mistakes,” Gates said, “but the fundamentals of the system — a marketplace-driven system where we invest in education and a great infrastructure for the long term — that’s continued.” Even in the country’s “darkest hour,” he said, American businesses were still innovating.

“Last fall was really blindsiding,” Buffett said later. Still, “I did not worry about the overall survival of our economy.”

The worst recession since the 1930s may be over, but the recovery is not expected to be strong enough to stem job losses and get businesses hiring again. Employers shed a net total of 190,000 jobs in October, a government survey showed Thursday. It was the 22nd straight month of losses. And the unemployment rate jumped last month to 10.2 percent, a 26- year high.

Buffett also commended the Bush administration’s actions last September, saying that “only the government could have saved things” after the collapse of Lehman Brothers triggered a freeze-up in credit markets and panic on Wall Street.

In the future, however, Buffett said, “there should be more downside to the head of any institution that has to go to the federal government to be saved for reasons of the greater society. And so far, we have been better at carrots and sticks in rewarding CEOs at the top. But I think some more sticks are called for.”

The two endeared themselves to the audience with tips. Buffett exhorted students to “marry the right person” and said, “The worst investment you can have is cash.”

Gates, meanwhile, said he sees big opportunities in environmentally friendly energy and medicine.

“Capitalism is great,” he said.

Gates wore a suit and tie, flashing the inner red lining of his jacket as he walked to his chair. Buffett, who earned a master’s degree from Columbia in 1951, wore a sweater with the Columbia insignia. Berkshire owns The Buffalo News, and Buffett is the newspaper’s chairman.

Students in the audience said they were glad the two were so confident about the economy.

“That probably weighs a lot to a lot of people to hear Buffett say we’re out of the crisis,” said Andrea Basche, an Earth Institute student at Columbia.


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