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Posts Tagged ‘Mr. Bernanke’

Should Hank Paulson Be In Jail?

Leading bank analyst Chris Whalen has raised the question of whether criminal charges should be brought against former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson.Any discussion of whether Paulson committed unlawful actions as Treasury Secretary needs to start wit…

It’s Not the “Great Recession”. It’s the Great BANK ROBBERY

In case it’s not crystal clear, this isn’t the “Great Recession”.It’s really the Great Bank Robbery.First, there was the threat of martial law if the $700 Billion Tarp bailout wasn’t passed. Specifically, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson warned Congres…

Government Policy Caused America’s Unemployment Crisis

The unemployment rate has risen again for the the first time in 4 months. I predicted a growing, long-term unemployment problem last year.Indeed, even after the government plays with the numbers to make them look better (using inaccurate birth-death …

No change: global economy still facing uncertainties

US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke has made some remarks that have scared the markets a little bit, but what he has said isn’t all that surprising.

He has told the US Senate Banking Committee that record low interest rates would still be needed to support economic recovery, that the outlook for the US economy is ‘unusually uncertain’ and that the Fed is prepared to step in with ‘further policy actions’ to boost the US economy if needed.

It is hardly a surprise. The world economy is still very much in recovery phase and facing imbalances  – chiefly in the form of an unprecedented debt hangover and its real-world recessionary consequences. It will take years to put right.

The economic bounce-back – such as it has been – from the depths plummed in 2009 was hugely assisted by fiscal stimulus packages across the world, record low interest rates and an inventory effect (notably strong in the auto industry where the swings in activity have been massaged by scrappage schemes and tax breaks).

But we are now entering a new phase. Unemployment in the US and many parts of Europe is high and economists are concerned that new jobs are not being created in the numbers that they should be at this point in the recovery phase. There is little prospect of certain sectors – like construction – soaking up the excess labour with a rapid return to pre-2009 levels of activity.

Lurking in the background in Europe are persistent worries over public debt, the health of the banking sector and continued strains on the euro currency.

The world economy is still in uncharted territory, this economic recession and recovery – with its financial origins and unprecedented debt overhang  – is very different from past experiences. It looks like interest rates will stay very low for the foreseeable future, inflationary pressures not really a significant issue. On the upside, Asia is still looking very strong (though China’s car market and industrial growth is bound to slow in the second half).

Mr Bernanke has effectively reminded everyone that it’s not business as usual and that this economic recovery is likely to be slow and fragile. The rate at which fiscal stimuli can be dialled down without endangering growth prospects is likely to continue to be a contentious issue. I’ll be canvassing auto industry forecasters next week to get their latest take on where auto markets – and ultimately industry output – are heading.

A big concern, it seems to me, is where the major developed world economies will be going in 2011. If this economic recovery runs out of steam with interest rates at record lows, inflationary pressures subdued and many governments hemmed in on spending, getting it going again won’t be easy. And the risk of a Japan-style period of prolonged price deflation and slump would then be higher. I wonder what Obama makes of Cameron’s planned public spending cuts? 

ANALYSIS: China caution tempers auto optimism

No Wonder the Outlook for the Economy is “Unusually Uncertain” … the Fed is Killing It

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke testified today that the outlook for the economy is “unusually uncertain”.That’s not surprising.Nothing has changed since I made the following points last December.High-Level Fed Officials Slam BernankeFed Vice Chairman Donal…

“Bernanke Warned Congress On Wednesday That The United States Could Soon Face A Debt Crisis Like The One In Greece”

Bernanke is now joining Rosenberg, Ferguson and Faber, Edwards, Grice and many others in warning that the debt crisis rearing its head in Greece may spread to America, causing U.S. interest rates to climb.As the Washington Times wrote yesterday: With…

Questions for Bernanke’s Senate Confirmation Hearing

The Senate Banking Committee will be chatting with Ben Bernanke this Thursday to vote on his reappointment.Demand that the Committee ask the following questions for our esteemed Esteemed Chairman (and contact your own Senators also and demand that they…

Capitalism, Socialism or Fascism?

What is the current American economy: capitalism, socialism or fascism?SocialismMany people call the Bush and Obama administration’s approach to the economic crisis “socialism”.Are they right?Well, Nouriel Roubini writes in a recent essay:This is a cri…

Government Leaders Said Bailouts Were Needed Because “The House Next Door Was Burning Down” . . . Were They Right?

Government leaders said that massive bailouts were necessary. Were they right?Bullying CongressThe New York Times wrote on July 16th:In retrospect, Congress felt bullied by Mr. Paulson last year. Many of them fervently believed they should not prop up…

Snail’s pace

Recovery from this recession is likely to take several years, says the IMF

WHEN the chairman of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, told a Washington think-tank this month that “the recession is very likely over at this point”, he was careful to add that the American economy would remain weak for some time yet. Analysis released on Tuesday September 22nd by IMF economists who have been studying the aftermath of 88 banking crises over the past four decades, supports Mr Bernanke’s cautious talk. While most discussion of the worst recession since the Depression looks at the immediate pain from lost jobs and shuttered shops, the IMF analysis suggests that the effects of the downturn will be felt long after it is technically over.

It is not surprising that trouble in the banks results in big drops in GDP: the IMF finds that output per head falls steadily for three years after a typical banking crisis. Recovering from that takes a long time, even after a return to pre-crisis growth rates. Seven years after a typical banking crisis has ended output per head is 10% lower, on average, than it would have been in the absence of a crash. The IMF also finds that recessions (such as this one) that are associated with banking crises lead to output declines that are about three times as large in the medium term as those that follow currency crises (222 of which the fund’s economists also scrutinised). …

Senator Sanders: “Don’t Believe Anybody Who’s Telling You ‘The Recession is Over’ “

Senator Sanders writes today:Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said, “it is very likely that the recession has ended.” Well, let me just suggest to Mr. Bernanke that today we have about 17 percent of our workforce – 26 million Americans – who are…

Be gentle with Ben

America’s Federal Reserve is not very popular

AT LEAST Ben Bernanke is well liked by Barack Obama. America’s president nominated Mr Bernanke for a second spell as the chairman of the Federal Reserve this week, well before his current term expires. But the trust placed in him by Mr Obama belies the public attitude to America’s central bank. In a recent poll only 30% of respondents said that the Fed is doing a good or excellent job, a worse rating than even the Internal Revenue Service, the country’s tax collectors. And Mr Bernanke should not expect things to get much better. The Fed may have to intervene in markets more to prevent new bubbles. Any tightening of monetary policy is sure to prove unpopular.

Bernanke defends bail-out package

Ben Bernanke

Ben Bernanke, the boss of the US central bank, has defended the US bail-out plan citing his fears of a second Great Depression, during a public talk.

"I was not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the second Great Depression", he said at an event in Kansas.

Helping finance firms as part of the $700bn (£424bn) stimulus plan had benefitted the wider economy, he said.

He added that more regulation was needed so no firm was too big to fail.

"I had to hold my nose and stop those firms from failing. I am as disgusted about it as you are"

Ben Bernanke

"Too big to fail is a terrible situation and we’ve got to fix that," said Mr Bernanke during the town hall event.

"I think that’s the top priority for politicians going forward."

He said more laws were needed to permit government to wind down failing "financial behemoths" in a transparent manner, to prevent "damage throughout the system".

‘Fiscal sanity’

The central bank in conjunction with the the US Treasury, organised a $700bn bank bail-out plan in last October, and has since spent around $3 trillion to boost the credit markets and mitigate the downturn.

The government’s intervention in rescuing and providing state aid, for insurance giant AIG among others, has come under criticism from those who say no firm should be too large to fail.

"I had to hold my nose and stop those firms from failing. I am as disgusted about it as you are," said Mr Bernanke.

While most of what Mr Bernanke said has been said before, it is unusual for a Fed chairman to have such direct contact with the public, allowing for questions from ordinary Americans.

Looking ahead he said he expected inflation to remain low for some time, but that once the economy improved it would be crucial for the Fed to raise interest rates.

He also said while the deficit was likely to remain high "it is very important for the Congress and the administration to develop a plan, to say, "Here is how we’re going to get back to fiscal sanity".</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Nouriel Roubini: Why Bernanke Deserves To Be Reappointed

LAST week Ben Bernanke appeared before Congress, setting off a discussion over whether the president should reappoint him as chairman of the Federal Reserve when his term ends next January. Mr. Bernanke deserves to be reappointed. Both the con…

US interest rates to ‘remain low’

Ben Bernanke

Ben Bernanke, head of the US Federal Reserve, has defended the central bank’s policy in addressing the recession, including its stimulus plan.

Testifying before the House Financial Committee in his twice-yearly report on monetary policy, he said the focus was to foster "economic recovery".

He sought to reassure markets that government intervention could be withdrawn in a "smooth and timely" way.

Interest rates were likely to remain low for some time, he added.

He said economic conditions meant rates would be kept at exceptionally low levels for "an extended period", between 0% and 0.25%.

‘Persuaded’

Congress approved a $787bn economic stimulus plan in February, aimed at saving or creating 3.5 million jobs and encouraging consumer spending and rebuilding infrastructure.

The plan included tax breaks and money for social programmes.

"Although the recession in the rest of the world led to a steep drop in the demand for US exports, this drag on our economy appears to be waning"

Ben Bernanke, chairman, US Federal Reserve

"It is important to assure the markets that the extraordinary policy measures we have taken in response to the financial crisis and the recession can be withdrawn in a smooth and timely manner as possible," said Mr Bernanke.

Barney Frank, the head of the committee highlighted concerns over inflation. "If people think there’s going to be inflation, then that’s inflationary."

He said Mr Bernanke had addressed such concerns, adding that he was "persuaded by the chairman and others that we are able, in an orderly way, to undo what we had to do so that there will not be that inflationary impact".

Analyst Hugh Johnson, chief investment officer at Johnson Illington Advisors, said Mr Bernanke’s remarks showed that if the job market improved, the Fed would not hesitate in changing its policy.

The Fed is saying it has "the tools for preserving price stability, which effectively means that they have the tools to reduce the levels of liquidity in the financial system before inflation takes hold", said Mr Johnson.

Recovery

Mr Bernanke cited signs that the financial markets had improved, and so had the US economy.

"Although the recession in the rest of the world led to a steep drop in the demand for US exports, this drag on our economy appears to be waning," he said.

However, he cautioned that the unemployment rate remained high and job insecurity, coupled with a fall in home values and limited credit, meant gains in consumer spending would be restricted.

Looking ahead, Mr Bernanke said the central bank expected output to improve in slightly in the rest 2009, with 2010 seeing a gradual recovery.

Rudy Narvas, an analyst at 4Cast in New York, said: "[Mr Bernanke] is still pretty dovish on the economy. He still believes that slack is going to remain at least through 2011."

But he added: "He is saying that they can raise rates even though the unwinding of the balance sheet hasn’t finished yet, which is kind of important, because it suggests to us that they could begin raising rates by as early as 2011."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

On the mend

The Fed’s chairman talks up the economy

IT HAS been a long time since comments on the economy by an official of America’s Federal Reserve comments could be described as cheerful. Yet there was no denying the upbeat tone of Ben Bernanke’s testimony to Congress on Tuesday July 21st.

Markets have experienced “notable improvements,” the Fed’s chairman told Congress. The fear of investors has “eased somewhat,” and “many markets are functioning more normally.” As for the economy, consumer spending has been stable, the drop in the housing market has moderated and many “of our trading partners are also seeing signs of stabilisation.” His fingers may be crossed but it is clear that Mr Bernanke thinks the recession, if not over now, soon will be. …

Fed under fire

Analysis
By Steve Schifferes
Economics reporter, BBC News

<img src=”http://newsimg.bbc.co.uk/media/images/45125000/jpg/_45125828_-73.jpg” align=”left” width=”226″ height=”170″ alt=”US Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke ” border=”0″ vspace=”4″ hspace=”4″>

Ben Bernanke, the chairman of the US central bank, the Federal Reserve, has played a central role in the global financial crisis.

The Fed, along with the US Treasury, organised the $700bn (£496bn) bank bail-out plan in October 2008, and has since spent an additional $3 trillion propping up the credit markets and trying to boost the economy.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight"

William Donaldson, former SEC chief

Mr Bernanke’s four-year term as Fed chairman comes up for renewal in January, and his reappointment is now the subject of an increasingly bitter debate between right and left.

Under fire

Bear Stearns office

His role in the bail-out has come under fire from conservative Republicans and left wing Democrats, who believe that he betrayed his Republican roots by providing so much state support for the banks while ordinary citizens have suffered from the economic downturn.

Other economic conservatives fear that the huge Fed lending – along with a Federal government deficit that is expected to reach $1.7 trillion this year, is likely to prove highly inflationary, and are urging the Fed to unwind its big lending programme as soon as possible.

And some influential voices argue that, since the Fed performed poorly regulating the banks before the crisis, it should not be given the lead role now.

"Its credibility has been tarnished by the easy credit policies it pursued and the lax regulatory oversight..and the heavy influence that the banks have on the Fed’s governance," say two former heads of the Securities and Exchange Commission, William Donaldson and Arthur Levitt.

‘No interference’

Barack Obama

But Mr Bernanke has also attracted wide support among mainstream economists and investors for his handling of the crisis.

A petition from more than 250 prominent economists, including Yale’s Robert Schiller and three Nobel Prize winners (Robert Merton, Eric Maskin, and Daniel McFadden) argues that the criticisms are putting the independence of the Fed at risk.

"When the Fed judges it’s time to begin tightening monetary conditions, it must be allowed to do so without interference," they said.

And Mr Bernanke so far has one very important backer – President Barack Obama, the man who will decide later this year whether to reappoint him.

"He is doing a fine job in difficult circumstances," Mr Obama said at a press conference in June.

Popular anger

Shoppers in Manhattan

It is highly unusual in US politics for the job of Fed chairman to be so politicised – and the previous, long-serving chairman, Alan Greenspan, always attracted bi-partisan support.

The debate over Mr Bernanke’s future, however, is also a debate about the future course of US economic policy after a year of unprecedented government intervention amid the deepest economic downturn since World War II.

Mr Bernanke, and his ally US Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner (who played a key role in the financial bail-out in October when he was head of the New York branch of the Fed) have been trying to steer a middle course, providing emergency relief to the banking sector but making it clear that these are only temporary measures.

At the same time, they are planning to toughen up regulation to prevent future crises – and much of that regulatory power will be accrued by the Fed.

Critics fear that Mr Bernanke will become too powerful, and the banks would like to weaken the close regulatory oversight being proposed by the government.

At the same time, there is huge popular anger at the scale of the bank bail-out, and a belief that this constitutes "socialism for the rich", with ordinary citizens suffering from the economic fall-out from the banking crisis.

These feelings have become stronger as it has become clear that, despite President Obama’s $787bn stimulus package, the US recession is likely to be long and deep, with unemployment rising sharply and forecast to top 10%.

Recession lingering

Job seekers at a jobs fair in New York

The Fed’s own assessment of the US economy is still distinctly downbeat, and in its most recent pronouncement said that "downside risks as predominating in the near term," although it is hopeful of a mild recovery by the end of 2009.

So the Fed is likely to continue with its program of credit easing.

Despite the worries of conservative economists, it argues that there is little immediate danger of inflation at the moment with economy still weak.

The Fed’s loose monetary policy also take some pressure off the Obama administration, which is facing calls from the left for a second stimulus package to provide a further fiscal boost the the economy.

This would be politically problematic, and also make it more difficult for the President to pass his other, expensive policy iniatives, such as health care reform.

Bernanke’s Rivals

Larry Summers

But if the economy did worsen significantly, it is still possible that Mr Obama might want to replace the man who symbolises the bank bail-out in the public imagination.

The leading candidate to replace him is the charismatic figure of Larry Summers, the former US Treasury Secretary who is now a key economic advisor to the President.

Mr Summers, a former President of Harvard, is a forceful advocate of further government intervention in the economy, but has run into trouble because of his outspoken views.

Another possibility would be Janet Yellin, a former Fed governor and advisor to President Clinton, who has dovish views about inflation.

However, many investors believe that it would be a mistake to replace Mr Bernanke, and are hoping that, in the interest of policy stability, that he is reappointed.

In the opinion of David Wyss of Standard & Poor’s: "Don’t change horses in mid-stream." </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The week ahead

Iraq’s Kurds go to the polls, and other news

• THE chairman of America’s Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke, delivers his semi-annual monetary-policy testimony to the House Financial Services Committee in Washington, DC, on Tuesday July 21st. Mr Bernanke may shed more light on how far he believes that America is bouncing back from the financial crisis and economic downturn. Mr Obama recently spoke of signs that the “economic storm” is waning and Timothy Geithner, his treasury secretary, has talked about “very encouraging” indications that confidence is returning to the financial system. The administration has decided not to bail out CIT, a struggling commercial lender, reinforcing its own confidence that the financial system can withstand a bankruptcy filing that could come soon.

For background, see article …

David Fiderer: Hank Paulson Rewrites History Before Congress

The fallout of Paulson’s two disastrous decisions (to let Lehman fail and reverse his position on foreclosure relief) prompted the former Treasury Secretary to abuse his powers, with some not-so-veiled threats.