Bernanke sees signs of economic improvement
Says danger that country has fallen into ‘substantial downturn’ has faded
 
updated 8:44 p.m. ET June 9, 2008 
WASHINGTON - Despite a recent spike in the nation’s unemployment rate, the 
danger that the economy has fallen into a “substantial downturn” appears to 
have waned, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Monday.

Addressing a Fed conference in Chatham, Mass., on Monday night, Bernanke said a 
government report last week showing the unemployment rate rising from 5 percent 
in April to 5.5 percent in May — the biggest one-month jump in two decades — 
was “unwelcome.” However, the Fed chief said other forces should “provide some 
offset to the headwinds that still face the economy.”

The Fed’s powerful doses of interest rate cuts, the government’s $168 billion 
stimulus package, further progress in the repair of problems in financial and 
credit markets, a gradual ebbing of the drag from the deep housing slump and 
still solid demand from abroad for U.S. exports should help the economy over 
the remainder of this year, he said.

Although economic activity is “likely to be weak” during the current 
April-to-June quarter, Bernanke said “the risk that the economy has entered a 
substantial downturn appears to have diminished over the past month or so.”

Last Friday fears were rekindled that the country could be headed for a deep 
recession after the unemployment rate zoomed and oil prices registered their 
biggest single-day leap.

However, Bernanke said, “Recent incoming data, taken as a whole, have affected 
the outlook for economic activity and employment only modestly.”

Still, soaring energy prices are a double-edged sword for the country. Oil 
prices closed Monday at $134.35 a barrel, down from last week’s high of $139.12 
a barrel. They risk putting a further damper on growth as well as spreading 
inflation through the economy, Bernanke said.

“Inflation has remained high,” largely reflecting sharp increases in the prices 
of globally traded commodities, Bernanke said. “The latest round of increases 
in energy prices has added to the upside risks to inflation and inflation 
expectations,” he said.

The Fed is paying close attention to the extent to which consumers, investors 
and businesses believe prices will rise in the future, he said. If consumers, 
investors and businesses believe inflation will continue to go up, they will 
change their behavior in ways that aggravate inflation, turning it into a 
self-fulfilling prophecy.

The Fed “will strongly resist an erosion of longer-term inflation expectations, 
as an unanchoring of those expectations would be destabilizing for growth as 
well as for inflation,” Bernanke said.

Bernanke spoke Monday evening to a conference on understanding inflation and 
the implications for Fed policymakers in setting interest rates. The forum was 
sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. His comments on the economy’s 
outlook were fairly brief and were part of a larger, mostly academic speech.

Last week, Bernanke sent his strongest signal yet that the Fed’s rate-cutting 
campaign was probably over for now because of growing concerns that soaring oil 
and other commodity prices — along with a weakened dollar — are aggravating 
inflation.

To help brace the economy, the Fed dropped rates in late April to 2 percent, a 
nearly four-year low, continuing a rate-cutting campaign that started last 
September.

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. However, some 
believe inflation could flare up and force the Fed to begin boosting rates 
later this year or next year.

Inflation forecasting is important to Fed policymakers when determining the 
best course on interest rates. Even with extensive research over the years, 
much remains to be learned about both inflation forecasting and inflation 
control, Bernanke said. And there are areas where additional research could 
prove helpful.

Policymakers and analysts often have relied on information from commodity 
futures markets to help shape inflation forecasts, Bernanke said. In recent 
years, though, information from futures markets has “underpredicted commodity 
price increases ... leading to corresponding underpredictions of overall 
inflation,” he said. The “poor recent record” on that front raises the question 
of whether policymakers should continue to use this source of information and, 
if so, how, Bernanke said.

Despite the recent record, Bernanke said he didn’t think it was reasonable to 
ignore information about supply and demand culled by futures markets. However, 
it does seem reasonable, he said, to treat such information as highly uncertain.

Working to make economic data timelier and more accurate also would be useful 
to policymakers trying to divine inflation’s direction. Moreover, it would also 
be helpful for policymakers to know more about how people’s inflation 
expectations are influenced by Fed interest rate actions, Fed communications 
and economic developments such as oil price shocks.

“Much evidence suggests that expectations have become better anchored than they 
were a few decades ago, but that they nonetheless remain imperfectly anchored,” 
Bernanke said.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not 
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