Bernanke to continue stimulus

cawacko

Well-known member
What's the boards take? Time to end it or necessary to keep going?



Bernanke: Too Soon to Consider Tapering Bond Buying



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.

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.

Reducing the Fed's efforts to keep borrowing rates low would "carry a substantial risk of slowing or ending the economic recovery," Bernanke said.

Stocks surged on Bernanke's comments. The Dow Jones industrial average was up just 40 points before his comments were released at 10 a.m. EDT. Minutes later, the Dow was up 85 points after spiking to a triple-digit gain.

The Fed is pursuing an aggressive program of bond purchases to try to keep long-term interest rates down and encourage borrowing and spending. 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.

Investors have been closely scrutinizing policymakers' comments in recent weeks for clues about the pace of the bond purchases. The Fed said after its April 30-May 1 meeting that it could increase or decrease the pace depending on how the job market and inflation fare.

Bernanke's comments suggest the Fed is not ready to taper its purchases. He 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 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.


http://www.cnbc.com/id/100747262
 
Unemployment is still way too high for the FED to back off. It'd be one thing is fiscal policy was expansionary, but it isn't.
 
Unemployment is still way too high for the FED to back off. It'd be one thing is fiscal policy was expansionary, but it isn't.

Where is the breaking point for you that the Fed is creating another stock market and possible real estate bubble?
 
As soon as unemployment starts showing a more consistent trend downward, the FED needs to back off, but not until then.
 
1) Keep interest rates artificially low for years
2) Pump fiat money into the market to the tune of $85B per month... keep doing that for years
3) Encourage banks to loosen up their credit standards and start loaning money out to more people with lower credit
4) If that doesn't get unemployment back under 6%, keep doing it... sooner or later if we try the same thing over and over again the results will differ.

What could possibly go wrong?
 
1) Keep interest rates artificially low for years
2) Pump fiat money into the market to the tune of $85B per month... keep doing that for years
3) Encourage banks to loosen up their credit standards and start loaning money out to more people with lower credit
4) If that doesn't get unemployment back under 6%, keep doing it... sooner or later if we try the same thing over and over again the results will differ.

What could possibly go wrong?


Instead, let's induce another recession now because we're afraid we might have another recession at some unidentified point in the future.
 
Instead, let's induce another recession now because we're afraid we might have another recession at some unidentified point in the future.

Nonsense... we should just borrow at 'negative rates' and let future generations pay for our stuff today. We can borrow $100 trillion billion... cause rates are low! I just got a credit card app saying they would give me 0% for six months with no limit... who wouldn't max that out... it is a free loan. I can buy all the stuff I want today!!!
 
Nonsense... we should just borrow at 'negative rates' and let future generations pay for our stuff today. We can borrow $100 trillion billion... cause rates are low! I just got a credit card app saying they would give me 0% for six months with no limit... who wouldn't max that out... it is a free loan. I can buy all the stuff I want today!!!


We're talking about monetary policy, SF.
 
1) Keep interest rates artificially low for years
2) Pump fiat money into the market to the tune of $85B per month... keep doing that for years
3) Encourage banks to loosen up their credit standards and start loaning money out to more people with lower credit
4) If that doesn't get unemployment back under 6%, keep doing it... sooner or later if we try the same thing over and over again the results will differ.
!
What could possibly go wrong?
Yeah like nothing is going right! Chicken little much
 
Nonsense... we should just borrow at 'negative rates' and let future generations pay for our stuff today. We can borrow $100 trillion billion... cause rates are low! I just got a credit card app saying they would give me 0% for six months with no limit... who wouldn't max that out... it is a free loan. I can buy all the stuff I want today!!!
In lue of congress getting fiscal policy right, he fed has done an A+ job
 
The underclass we are creating with the long time unemployed and pretending it's the new normal and nothing can be done will hurt future generations. And I am continually stunned at the lack of interest in this terrible situation.
 
The underclass we are creating with the long time unemployed and pretending it's the new normal and nothing can be done will hurt future generations. And I am continually stunned at the lack of interest in this terrible situation.

What do you feel is the appropriate policy solution(s), if any, to deal with this issue?
 
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