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Bernanke signals more rate cuts unlikely
WASHINGTON (AP)
– June 3, 2008 – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signaled
Tuesday that further interest rate cuts are unlikely because of
concerns about inflation. High oil prices are a double-edged sword
that can both put a damper on already weak growth and spread
inflation, he said.
Bernanke, in prepared remarks delivered via satellite to an
international monetary conference in Spain, said that the Fed’s
powerful doses of rate reductions that started last September along
with the government’s $168 billion stimulus package, including
rebates for people and tax breaks for businesses, should bring about
“somewhat better economic conditions” in the second half of this
year.
To help brace the economy, the Fed last month dropped its key rate
to 2 percent, a nearly four-year low, but hinted that could be the
last reduction for a while. Bernanke drove that point home again on
Tuesday.
“For now policy seems well positioned to promote moderate growth and
price stability over time,” he said.
The Fed’s juggling act has gotten harder. It is trying to right a
wobbly economy without aggravating inflation.
Many economists believe the Fed will hold rates steady at its next
meeting on June 24-25 and probably through much, if not all, of this
year. A few believe that inflation could flare up and force the Fed
to begin boosting rates near the end of this year.
Bernanke, however, suggested that leaving rates at their current
levels should be sufficient to accomplish the Fed’s twin goals of
nurturing economic growth while preventing inflation from taking
off.
Economic growth in the current quarter, he acknowledged, is “likely
to be relatively weak.” Even as he reiterated the Fed’s hope for a
pickup in growth in the second half of this year and into 2009,
Bernanke said the economy continues to battle against a trio of
negative forces – a housing slump, credit problems and fragile
financial markets.
Until the slumping housing market and falling home prices show
“clearer signs of stabilization,” there will continue to be threats
to the economic growth getting back to full throttle, he said.
Moreover, recent increases in oil prices pose “additional downside
risks to growth,” he said.
At the same time, if already lofty oil prices, now hovering past
$127 a barrel, continue to rise, that could worsen inflation,
Bernanke warned.
The Fed’s aggressive rate-cutting campaign has contributed to a
lower value of the U.S. dollar. That, in turn, has helped to push up
the prices for imported goods flowing into the United States and
fuel a rise in consumer prices. Bernanke called that development “unwelcome.”
He said the Fed is “attentive to the implications of changes in the
value of the dollar for inflation and inflation expectations.”
Source: ap.org
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