Fed
extends stimulus and warns on US recovery
Ben
Bernanke extends Operation Twist stimulus but warns that unemployment
is unlikely to improve before end of the year
20
June, 2012
The
US Federal Reserve announced a $267bn (£176bn) plan to underpin the
US's fragile recovery Wednesday as chairman Ben Bernanke warned that
unemployment was unlikely to improve before the end of the year.
The
plan – an extension of a scheme known as Operation Twist – aims
to drive down long-term interest rate and encourage borrowing. The
announcement came as the latest statement from the Fed painted a
gloomier picture of the US economy and said it was prepared to take
more action if necessary.
The
Fed said that the growth in employment "has slowed in recent
months, and the unemployment rate remains elevated," and that
household spending "appears to be rising at a somewhat slower
pace than earlier in the year." The Fed also reiterated its
concern that "strains in global financial markets continue to
pose significant downside risks" to growth.
That
news will be a blow to the Obama administration in the run-up to an
election that looks set to be dominated by economic news in general
and the unemployment rate in particular.
At
a press conference Bernanke said the Fed had been too optimistic in
its projections for recovery, and warned again that Europe was a
significant drag on the US recovery.
Even
though the Fed said the US recovery appears to be slowing, Bernanke
stopped short of a third round of quantitative easing (QE3), a more
ambitious – and expensive – stimulus programme. He said: "We
still do have considerable scope to do more and we're prepared to do
more."
"People
are finding jobs, just not at the rate we would like to see,"
said Bernanke. The Fed is prepared to do more if it thinks necessary,
he said but those actions have consequences. "I don't think they
should be launched lightly," he said.
The
Fed predicted the unemployment rate would be 8% to 8.2%, roughly
today's levels, at the end of this year compared with the projection
of 7.8% to 8% in its April forecast.
Bernanke
warned that political infighting over the so-called "fiscal
cliff" could also have dire consequences. On December 31,
Bush-era tax cuts are due to expire and if Republicans and Democrats
fail to reach a compromise, the US faces steep spending cuts that
Mohamed El-Erian, chief executive of investment firm Pimco, has
estimated could be equivalent to 4% of GDP.
Bernanke
said Europe remained a grave concern. He said it was for European
leaders, not the US, to address their issues. "At this point
we're mostly just in consultation mode," he said. "We are
hoping for the best … but we are prepared in case things get worse
to protect the US economy and the US financial system."
"If
those risks increase then we suspect the Fed would be pretty quick
off the mark in taking more aggressive action," said Paul
Ashworth, chief US economist at Capital Economics.
David
Semmens, senior US economist at Standard Chartered, said the Fed's
actions showed it was "taking the slowdown seriously but they
are not concerned about a return to recession."
Gus
Faucher, senior macro-economist at PNC Financial, said the move was
largely in line with expectations but still left unanswered the big
question: "What is the benchmark for QE3?"
The
news left Wall Street flat. The Dow Jones ended the day just 0.1%
down.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.