Economists Call for Bernanke to Stay, Say Recession Is Over
by Phil Izzo
Thursday, August 13, 2009

Economists are nearly unanimous that Ben Bernanke should be reappointed to 
another term as Federal Reserve chairman, and they said there is a 71% chance 
that President Barack Obama will ask him to stay on, according to a survey.

Meanwhile, the majority of the economists The Wall Street Journal surveyed 
during the past few days said the recession that began in December 2007 is now 
over. Battling the downturn defined most of Mr. Bernanke's term, which began in 
early 2006 and expires in January, and economists say his handling of the 
crisis has earned him four more years as Fed chief.

"He deserves a lot of credit for stabilizing the financial markets," said 
Joseph Carson of AllianceBernstein. "Confidence in recovery would be damaged if 
he was not reappointed."

The Journal surveyed 52 economists; 47 responded.

After months of uncertainty, economists are finally seeing a break in the 
clouds. Forecasts were revised upward for every period, with 27 economists 
saying the recession had ended and 11 seeing a trough this month or next. Gross 
domestic product in the third quarter is now expected to show 2.4% growth at a 
seasonally adjusted annual rate amid signs of life in the manufacturing sector, 
partly spurred by inventory adjustments and strong demand for the "cash for 
clunkers" car-rebate program.

A better-than-expected employment report for July, where employers cut 247,000 
jobs and the jobless rate fell for the first time in 15 months, suggests the 
worst is over. The unemployment rate is still expected to rise to 9.9% by 
December, but economists forecast that the economy will shed far fewer jobs 
over the next 12 months than they had forecast last month.

Many of the economists said there is little to be gained by changing the Fed 
chairman, especially considering the massive task at hand for the central bank 
as the economy emerges from the recession.

"Continuity is critical as we emerge from this crisis. Otherwise we could slip 
back in again," said Diane Swonk of Mesirow Financial. "Bernanke is the best 
suited to undo what has been done when the time comes."

The Fed has taken unprecedented steps in an effort to avoid another Great 
Depression, and its exit strategy remains a key question. Some hints may emerge 
as the central bank's August policy meeting comes to an end Wednesday. The 
Fed's key policy-making tool, the federal-funds rate, isn't likely to change at 
this meeting or any time soon.

Only six economists expect the Fed to raise the federal-funds rate, now between 
0% and 0.25%, this year. Most expect an increase at some point in 2010, but 
more than a quarter of respondents don't see the rate moving until 2011 or 
later.

"The exit strategy will be very, very slow and cautious," said John Silvia of 
Wells Fargo. "The Fed will unwind the balance sheet before they raise the fed 
funds rates."

The Fed's balance sheet — the total value of all its loans and securities 
holdings — had more than doubled during the course of the crisis to more than 
$2 trillion, as lending facilities expanded in an effort to unfreeze credit 
markets. But as markets get back to normal, demand already has begun to wane, 
and the balance sheet has started to shrink. Now the composition of the balance 
sheet has begun to shift to Treasurys, mortgage-backed securities and agency 
debt as the Fed moves through a $1.75 trillion program announced in March to 
bring down long-term interest rates.

The Fed is deciding at this week's meeting whether to let that program run its 
course and how best to communicate its intentions to markets.

Whatever the Fed decides, the economists expressed some confidence that the 
central bank will be dealing with how to manage a recovery, not another 
recession. They expect GDP growth to remain above 2% at an annualized rate 
through the first half of next year, and they put the chances at just 20% of a 
"double-dip" second downturn before 2010.

But some said a recovery could make Mr. Bernanke's road to reappointment more 
rocky. "Once it is perceived that the economy is on its way to recovery, it 
gives Obama the opportunity to put in his own person," Mr. Silvia said. "It 
could be like Great Britain at the end of World War II. 'Thank you for all the 
hard work, Mr. Churchill, but we're going to bring someone else in to handle 
the next phase.'" Former president George W. Bush appointed Mr. Bernanke to 
succeed the departing Alan Greenspan. Presidents appoint Fed chiefs to 
four-year terms, and there are no term limits. Mr. Bernanke's term expires Jan. 
31.

Though the economists were overwhelmingly supportive of Mr. Bernanke, they 
don't think his tenure was without mistakes. A slow initial response to the 
credit squeeze and the decision to let Lehman Brothers fail were cited as the 
biggest errors.

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