Bernanke
Signals Fed Will Keep Stimulus in Place
Federal
Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is telling Congress Wednesday that the
U.S. job market remains weak and that it is too soon for the Federal
Reserve to end its extraordinary stimulus programs.
22
May, 2013
Reducing
the Fed's efforts to keep borrowing rates low would "carry a
substantial risk of slowing or ending the economic recovery,"
Bernanke said in testimony to the Joint Economic Committee.
Bernanke
noted that the economy is growing moderately this year and
unemployment has fallen to a four-year low of 7.5 percent. Still,
unemployment remains well above levels consistent with healthy
economies. And Bernanke said higher taxes and deep federal spending
cuts are expected to slow economic growth this year.
His
comments about the many risks facing the economy, along with the
benefits gained so far from the Fed's stimulus, suggest the Fed is
not ready to taper bond purchases that have helped lower long-term
interest rates to encourage more borrowing and spending.
Stocks
surged after Bernanke's comments. The Dow Jones industrial average
(^DJI) was up just 40 points before his comments were released at 10
a.m. EDT. Minutes later, the Dow was up 125 points.
The
Fed has said it plans to continue its $85 billion-a-month in Treasury
and mortgage bond purchases until the job market improves
substantially. And after its April 30-May 1 meeting, the Fed said it
could increase or decrease the pace depending on how the job market
and inflation fare.
Investors
have been closely scrutinizing policymakers' comments since then for
clues about the pace of the bond purchases.
Bernanke
has had solid support for the bond purchases among the voting members
of the Fed's interest-rate setting committee. At each of the Fed's
three policy meetings this year, the committee has approved the
purchases 11-1.
In
recent months, the job market and the broader economy have shown
renewed vigor. The economy has added an average of 208,000 jobs a
month since November. That's up from only 138,000 a month in the
previous six months.
The
economy has benefited from a resurgent housing market, rising
consumer confidence and the Fed's stimulus actions, which have helped
ignite a stock market rally. The Standard & Poor's 500 (^GSPC)
stock index has jumped 17 percent this year to a record high. Higher
stock prices tend to make many people feel wealthier and more
inclined to spend.
Those
gains, in part, are why critics of the bond purchases, including some
Fed regional bank presidents, have questioned the need to continue
them at their current pace. They argue that keeping interest rates
too low for too long could send inflation surging or inflate
dangerous bubbles in assets such as stocks or real estate. Such a
bubble could burst with the same destabilizing effects that the
housing bust caused.
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