Thu, Feb 23, 2012, 10:00 AM EST - U.S. Markets close in 6 hrs.

Bernanke urges caution in sharp deficit cutting

Bernanke urges Congress to be careful not to derail recovery with excessive deficit reduction

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Ben Bernanke is urging lawmakers to balance their desire to cut deficits with policies that could help boost the weak economy in the short run.

Bernanke told the House Budget Committee that he recognizes that huge budget deficits represent a serious threat to the economy.

"Even as fiscal policymakers address the urgent issue of fiscal sustainability, they should take care not to unnecessarily impede the current economic recovery," Bernanke said. "Fortunately, the two goals ... are fully compatible."

The Federal Reserve chairman is testifying a week after the Fed signaled that a full recovery could take at least three more years. As a result, the Fed said it doesn't plan to raise its benchmark interest rate from a record low before late 2014 at the earliest.

The hearing began on a contentious note. Chairman Paul Ryan, a Republican from Wisconsin, said the Fed's policies were adding to uncertainty and raising risks of higher inflation down the road.

Ryan was critical of the Fed's decision last week to announce that it hoped to hold interest rates at record low levels for three more years.

"I think this policy runs the great risk of fueling asset bubbles, destabilizing prices and eventually eroding the value of the dollar," Ryan told Bernanke. "The prospect of all three is adding to uncertainty and holding our economy back."

Bernanke is also appearing two days after the Congressional Budget Office estimated that the deficit will top $1 trillion for a fourth straight year and could stay around that level for years.

The two leaders offered contrasting views last summer over how to handle high budget deficits. Bernanke warned Republicans that threatening to block a pending increase in the nation's borrowing limit could hurt the economy. He said the debt ceiling was the "wrong tool" for trying to push federal spending cuts through Congress.

Ryan countered at the time that using the debt-ceiling vote as leverage to win meaningful deficit reductions was a valid approach.

This time, Bernanke will likely point to some economic improvements. Factories are making more goods. Americans are buying more cars. The unemployment rate is near its lowest level in nearly three years. And employers have produced six straight months of solid hiring.

Still, growth was only modest in the final three months of last year. And consumers will likely slow their spending if hiring and pay increases don't strengthen.

A key reason the deficit has surged in the past four years is that the government collected less tax revenue. In part, that's because the economy has yet to regain the millions of jobs lost during the Great Recession.

And the government has had to spend more on emergency unemployment benefits and efforts to boost growth, such as the Social Security tax cut that will expire in February unless Congress extends it.

The Fed has also taken extraordinary measures during and after the recession to try to help the economy recover. In June, it completed its second round of bond buying.

At a news conference after last week's Fed meeting, Bernanke said a third round of bond buying might be necessary. Some economists think the Fed could announce more bond buying as soon as its next meeting in March.

 
  • A.  •  20 days ago
    Lawmakers' "desire to cut deficits"! What a laugh!
  • Ctjoni  •  20 days ago
    Once again Bernanke the control freak helping to ruin the economy Now he is giving advice that would further ruin the economy. Want to help the economy law makers? Get rid of the Federal reserve and Bernanke.
  • Rich  •  20 days ago
    Let's keep the Ponzi operation going for as long as possible. This is the kind of leadership we have in America today.
  • Patrick  •  20 days ago
    The Government needs to realize that reduced revenues require a reduction in spending, because the millions of lost jobs are not coming back. Borrowing more will only make it worse.
  • stuck in the middle with ...  •  20 days ago
    Those who save in America are being screwed by this man. They use our money and pay us nothing for it. His concern is only for the private banks of the Federal Reserve and not Americans. It is that simple.
  • FreeSpeech  •  Newington, Connecticut  •  20 days ago
    Full steam ahead ! Steady as she goes . . . and disreagard that giant iceberg ahead . . .
  • Paul  •  San Jose, California  •  20 days ago
    what recovery?? RECOVERY is a sucker's word. The only way there is growth is if the government spends a trillion+ each year. That's lik 7-8% of GDP, or like 40% of their tax haul. Imagine you are making $50,000 a year (post taxes, you take home $50k), and you borrowed another $20,000 each year to fund your lifestyle. Living it up we are.
  • Super Poor  •  20 days ago
    and they did the impossible. They told us this is the worst economy since the depression, and yet what happened? They made it even worse.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  20 days ago
    The Federal Reserve and the Treasury are engaged in a three-pronged assault on honest, prudent Americans. Not content to merely drive down the purchasing power of the dollar in world markets by devaluation, and domestically by inflation, their artificially low interest rates simultaneously steal income from savers and benefit the same deadbeats, speculators, and badly-run banks which caused the problems in the first place.
  • usok  •  Houston, Texas  •  20 days ago
    The only benficiary of FED's low interest or zero interest rate is the Wall Street banks. It hurts savers and force them to invest in ricky stocks and over abundant houses. It does not encourge saving and investment in infrastructures and education. Even with tax dollar bailout, till this day Wall Street banks still pay their CEO and high ranking officers with millions dollars a year.
  • Thurston  •  Everett, Washington  •  20 days ago
    What a time we're living in. We are seeing, arguably, the most incompetent leadership in US history. When considering america's proud and noble past, this is awfully sad. Failed economic policies, record levels of foolish and wasteful spending, and a US debt that is increasing more than twice as fast as any other 3-year peiod in history ......america desperately needs quality leadership.
  • Lance  •  Tucson, Arizona  •  20 days ago
    We give China paper. They give us products. How much longer will it work?
  • Monopoly  •  20 days ago
    The New World Order is Communism.....
  • joseph m  •  New Hartford, New York  •  20 days ago
    Yea he's been so right about everything for so long. ,Seniors have lost thousands because of his low interest policy,not to mention the housing bubble he and his buddies laughed about
  • tango1956a  •  Poughkeepsie, New York  •  20 days ago
    I got a year end statement for a money market fund. Yearly interest .06%/year. Thanks Ben! The money of savers is being destroyed while you enrich the powerful. And the "growth" in the US economy? Feeble.
  • MikeN  •  Corona, California  •  20 days ago
    Bernanke (imo) is a complete idiot. He hasn't gotten anything right on the Fed side and he's now going to tell Obama & Co to NOT cut too much? Doesn't understand Budgeting 101. Any individual or business that spent the way government does would be out of business and out in the street. Get it right, Ben. Cut and cut big time before we're out of time.
  • basicinvestor123  •  Doylestown, Pennsylvania  •  20 days ago
    Ron Paul is starting to look even better!
  • tronmaria  •  Atlanta, Georgia  •  20 days ago
    Bernanke government debt and spending is the problem with our econmony. Bernanke go back to school and major in economics. Oh take Obama with you.
  • Henri  •  Santa Clara, California  •  20 days ago
    One addict cautioning another not to quit cold turkey.
  • Robert  •  20 days ago
    No one has or will cut anything and this freak is warning about cuts? They have not even cut the growth of increase in spending. That's right even the so called military cuts . Nonsense. The fed was there at one point to be the adult in the room with the politicians, not anymore.
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