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| Fed’s Bernanke Running Out of Options | | Print | |
| Written by Bob Adelmann | ||
| Thursday, 26 August 2010 15:30 | ||
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The economy continues to suffer as shown by weak demand for housing, high unemployment, and declines in hard goods manufacturing. As Randall Forsythe put it, “Every data point on employment and housing since midyear has fallen short of expectations, in some cases, far short.” The numbers just And it’s foolish to look for a recovery in housing without a recovery in employment. As noted here there are three main reasons why housing isn’t likely to rebound anytime soon: 1) There is a mountain of unsold homes on the market, more than a year’s supply; 2) There aren’t enough qualified buyers trying to purchase a home right now; and 3) bankers are still holding onto their cash, preferring to keep it invested in risk-free Treasuries. The trouble is that policymakers themselves are divided about what to do. The Washington Post pointed out that the Fed’s policy intentions “have been unusually muddled in the past two months,” and according to the view shared by many mainstream economists, “it is unclear how likely it is that the Fed will undertake major new efforts ... [or] what form those actions would take.” Some Fed people admit that they don’t know what to do. Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Fed, just trusted his gut when the Fed’s balance sheet started shrinking because of mortgages being paid off due to refinancings. Said Lockhart, “The shrinking of the balance sheet just didn’t feel right to me under the circumstances.” (Emphasis added.) It is the federal moneybag which can finance any government expenditure and come to the rescue of any number of banks and financial institutions, it can create new money with the speed of a computer command and transfer it in seconds by high-speed modem. It can create deposits of one dollar as efficiently as it can create one million, one billion, or even one trillion dollars. The Fed derives this magical power from its position as money monopolist, from the legal tender force of its money, and from its regulatory powers over financial institutions. Its power is purely political, created and granted by the United States Congress, sanctioned by the courts, and enforced by the police…. When the Chairman speaks, the financial world holds its breath.... On Friday, the chairman will use one of the only two tools the Fed has at its disposal: words. In a rational, free-market world, Bernanke would be sight-seeing in Jackson Hole, and nobody would care. And the free market would determine the the value of money, with no one granted monopoly power to create it out of thin air. Photo of Bernanke: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (1)
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Mikey Pinkie-Rings
said:
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...and 3) bankers are still holding onto their cash, preferring to keep it invested in risk-free Treasuries. Um... is it just me or does this sound kinda funny? I think you probably didn't mean to call Treasuries "risk-free." I would love to hear an explanation of how Treasuries are truly risk free considering that we expect the dollar and the creditworthiness of the US government to be decimated shortly. |





When Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke 

