Will all those people
who think that the U. S.
economy has not slowed down in the first half of 2012 please raise their
hands. Thank you Ben Bernanke, anyone
else. Really, anyone else? Please anyone else who thinks the U. S.
economy has not slowed down in the last six months please raise your
hands. No one, huh.
Stephen Crowley/The New York Times |
Ok, will all those
people who think the U. S.
economy will be strong in the second half of 2012 please raise their
hands. Thank you again Mr. Bernanke, yes
we see you, no need to stand up and wave.
Anyone else? Come on people, Mr.
Bernanke is a Ph. D. economist, former economic adviser to President George W.
Bush and an acknowledged expert on the Great Depression. He knows his stuff. So someone must agree with him. No one huh?
Chairman of the
Federal Reserve Board of Governors Ben Bernanke made his regular stop
before Congress to answer questions about what he and the Fed think about the
economy. Here
is the gist of what he said.
But Mr. Bernanke told a Congressional
committee on Thursday that the Fed had not yet concluded that growth
was slowing, nor that new measures to stimulate the economy were warranted. The
Fed’s policy-making committee meets in two weeks.
Yes everyone was
stunned, since every piece of economic data known to man is showing that
the U. S.
economy is slowing and that government fiscal policy is in a contractionary
mode. Apparently Mr. Bernanke did not
get the message.
“Economic
growth appears poised to continue at a moderate pace over coming quarters,
supported in part by accommodative monetary policy,” Mr. Bernanke told the
Joint Economic Committee, an assessment that on its surface was little changed
from his last public remarks on the state of the economy in late April.
About the best thing
that could be said about Mr. Bernanke’s testimony is that it has left us confused. But then we are not alone.
Beneath
the surface of that forecast, however, Mr. Bernanke said that the Fed was
confused. The government estimated that employers added only 69,000 jobs in
May, a marked slowdown from the reported pace earlier in the year. But other
economic indicators show a relatively steady, if lackluster, expansion.
The really nice thing is that Republicans,
campaigning on a platform that Mr. Obama has been responsible for a bad economy
and should be replaced wanted to make sure that the Fed did nothing to
stimulate the economy and make Mr. Obama’s re-election chances better.
Republicans
also pressed repeatedly for Mr. Bernanke to make a clear commitment that the
Fed would take no further action to stimulate growth.
Representative
Kevin Brady, a Texas
Republican, asked Mr. Bernanke to “look the market in the eye” and “take a
third round of quantitative easing off
the table.”
So it is comforting that Republicans are now open
about their desires to put politics ahead of the economy (and everything else),
no more pussyfooting for them, they want the economy to fail and will do
everything they can to make it fail.
They need not worry
much, though, because the Fed is out of bullets in the monetary gun
anyway, and it may be that Mr. Bernanke was stating that the Fed would do
nothing more because they can do nothing more.
Republicans actually restrained themselves. None of them asked Bernanke to disband the Fed altogether.
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