The Federal Reserve is ready to take further steps to support economy "almost staggering," said Chairman Ben Bernanke Tuesday, citing the clear will of the central bank to intervene further to prevent the fall in U.S. recession.
Referring to an anemic job, depressed and confidence in Europe's financial strains, Bernanke advises members not to cut spending too quickly in the short term, even if they are to reduce the budget deficit over the long term.
"The Committee will continue to closely monitor economic developments and is ready to take further steps if necessary to support a stronger economic recovery in the context of price stability," said Bernanke before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress.
"An important objective is to avoid any budgetary decision that could hamper the ongoing economic recovery," he said.
Bernanke's comments have allowed Wall Street to reduce accumulated losses in the persistent fear of seeing Greece in default.
Bernanke also noted that financial strains of Europe constituted a risk to economic growth in the United States, to the extent that they have altered the sense of businesses and households.
A real estate industry in a slump and a credit rarefied are other elements which hinder a recovery that is more solid, Bernanke continued, leaving little hope of rapid improvement in market conditions of employment.
"The latest indicators, jobless claims and hiring plans, point to a likelihood of growth of labor market softer in times to come," he observed.
Important but not decisive
Stressing that the resurgence of inflation this year had not contaminated the economy, Bernanke agreed that price pressures would remain tenuous in the foreseeable future.
As a result, the Fed has had a free hand to a new initiative of monetary easing in September, when it announced it would sell for $ 400 billion of Treasury securities in the short term to buy long-term effects , for influencing the maturity of this segment of the yield curve.
This initiative, which, in the opinion of Bernanke, will lead to lower long rates by 0.20 percentage point, leaving some economists skeptical.The latter argue that the problem is not a lack of funds to restart lending and investment, but a lack of demand.
In fact, Bernanke admits that this initiative, according to him equivalent to reduce the fed funds rate half a point, is important but not an "enormous support to the economy."
"This should help a little job creation and growth. This is especially important now that the economy, the recovery is almost staggering. We must ensure that the recovery continues and does not fall and that the unemployment rate continues to decline, "he said.
To stem the financial crisis of 2008-2009, the Fed reduced rates to a level close to zero and its balance sheet has more than tripled to a record 2,900 billion.
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