Bernanke: Global 'saving glut' possible
Fed  chief says nothing has disproven his belief that U.S. trade deficit may
be  partly driven by excessive savings.
March 24, 2006: 6:39 AM EST(CNN  Money)
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said in a
letter released Thursday nothing had emerged to undercut his year-old hypothesis
that a "global saving glut" was a factor behind the large U.S. trade  gap.

"Nothing has occurred since March 2005 to diminish support for the  'global
saving glut' hypothesis, and the factors contributing to this 'glut'  generally
remain in place," Bernanke told Rep. Mark Kennedy, R-Minn.
Federal  Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke
The March 17 letter, released by Kennedy's  office, was in response to a
written question submitted in conjunction with a  Feb. 15 hearing on monetary
policy held by the House Financial Services  Committee.

Bernanke said while the U.S. trade deficit widened last year,  "the surplus
of the developing economies is generally estimated to have widened  as well."

"Much of the widening of the U.S. deficit and of the developing  country
surplus is attributable to higher oil prices," he wrote. "Additionally,  U.S.
economic growth again exceeded that of a trade-weighted average of  industrial
economies in 2005, thus continuing to support the relative  attractiveness of
investments in the United States."

Bernanke, who took  office as Fed chairman on Feb. 1, had argued in a speech
he delivered in March  2005 that an excess of saving relative to investment
opportunities in the  developing world had, in effect, washed ashore in the
United States.

This  "global saving glut," he said in that speech, "helps to explain both
the  increase in the U.S. current account deficit and the relatively low level
of  long-term real interest rates in the world today."

He pointed to a number  of factors that may have fueled a "saving glut,"
including a decision by  developing Asian countries to build up foreign exchange
reserves in the wake of  the 1997-98 financial crisis and surging oil revenue
in oil-exporting countries  amid rising prices.

In a separate letter released Thursday, Bernanke told  Rep. Harold Ford,
D-Tenn., a reversal of these capital flows away from the  United States, were it
to occur, would not necessarily harm the U.S.  economy.

"Should such a development occur, it might be associated with a  decline in
the value of the dollar and a narrowing of the U.S. trade deficit,"  Bernanke
said in the March 21 letter.

But he added: "Neither of these  events would be likely to threaten U.S.
growth or boost inflation and interest  rates to a worrisome extent."

No harm, no foul
The shortfall in the  U.S. current account, the broadest measure of the
nation's overseas trade, hit a  record $804.9 billion last year, or 6.4 percent 
of
U.S. gross domestic product.  Many economists view the trade gap as a
made-in-the-USA phenomenon, reflecting  large budget deficits and consumers that
cannot stop spending more than they  earn.

In a speech Monday, Bernanke said the "saving glut" hypothesis was  just one
of a number of possible explanations for unusually low long-term U.S.
interest rates.

In that speech, he assigned no greater weight to his  hypothesis than to
other potential explanations and concluded "the bottom line  for (Fed) policy
appears ambiguous."

His letter to Kennedy suggests,  however, he may give his thesis somewhat
greater weight than the other  explanations, such as the possibility that the
term premium investors demand to  cover the risk of losses on long-term holdings
had shrunk.

Bernanke said  Monday that if the "saving glut" hypothesis were correct then
"global  equilibrium interest rates -- and, consequently, the neutral policy
rate -- will  be lower than they otherwise would be" as long as the factors
behind the excess  saving persisted.

The Fed has been raising benchmark overnight rates for  21 months hoping to
get rates to a "neutral" setting before inflation erupts.  Fed officials are
expected to bump overnight rates up for a 15th straight time  to 4.75 percent
when they conclude a two-day meeting on Tuesday.

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