Thursday, July 30, 2009

No escape for Fed



In contrast to Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke's testimony last week, we cannot see a safe "exit strategy" for the Fed from its current loose monetary policy. Bernanke's ambivalent testimony of a safe exit strategy can only heighten uncertainty and exacerbate instabilities. Let's explain.

In his recent testimony on July 21 before the Committee on Financial Services of the House of Representatives, Bernanke was felicitous that aggressive money policy had averted the collapse of the financial system. However, he omitted to say that the same policy had failed to avert a collapse of real gross domestic product (GDP) and private investment and rising unemployment.

The economic recession continues despite interest rates being near-zero, money supply rising at 22% a year, unprecedented stimuli packages, and record fiscal deficits reaching 13% of GDP in 2009. Bernanke and President Barack Obama's team had clearly believed that a combination of aggressive money and fiscal policies would secure the return to full-employment and quickly. After all, Larry Summers had predicted the unemployment cresting at about 8%. These expectations were standard Keynesian predictions that have proven to be substantially off the mark. Full Story

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PBS: Breaking The Bank