----- 
From: Brian Mattox
Sent: Thursday, December 18, 2008
Subject: Why Gold, Why Now



US Federal Reserve cuts interest rates to near zero
By Barry Grey
17 December 2008
World Socialist Web Site

The Federal Reserve Board on Tuesday cut its benchmark federal funds
interest rate from 1 percent to a record low range of zero to one-quarter
percent, a bigger than anticipated reduction that indicates the US central
bank views the economic situation with increasing alarm.

The unprecedented action marks the tenth consecutive rate cut since the
housing and credit bubbles imploded in August of 2007. The statement issued
by the Fed's policy-making Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) provides an
indication of the depth of the unfolding economic slump and the
extraordinary speed with which it is developing.

The FOMC wrote: "Since the Committee's last meeting [October 28-29], labor
market conditions have deteriorated, and the available data indicate that
consumer spending, business investment and industrial production have
declined. Financial markets remain quite strained and credit conditions
tight. Overall, the outlook for economic activity has weakened further."

In the period between the last meeting of the FOMC and this week's meeting,
US payrolls have shrunk by more than half a million and the official
unemployment rate has risen to 6.7 percent. Other government measures of the
labor market that provide a more realistic estimate show unemployment to be
well over 10 percent.

The Fed's grim assessment was given added weight by economic data for
November released Monday and Tuesday showing an accelerating decline in
industrial production, a record fall in homebuilding and a record decline in
consumer prices. Taken together, these reports suggest an economy lurching
into the deepest and longest recession since the Great Depression of the
1930s.

The federal funds rate is the rate charged for overnight loans between
commercial banks. The Fed also announced a 75-basis-point cut in the
discount rate, charged for direct loans from the central bank to major
commercial banks, to 0.5 percent.

Wall Street reacted enthusiastically to the Fed's move, driving the Dow
Jones Industrial Average up nearly 359 points, or 4.20 percent.

In its statement, the Fed went to great lengths to reassure the markets that
it would continue to allocate trillions of dollars in public funds to
bolster the banks and major financial institutions. "The Federal Reserve,"
it declared, "will employ all available tools to promote the resumption of
sustainable economic growth and to preserve price stability." It said this
included the maintenance of "exceptionally low levels" of the federal funds
rate "for some time."

Having reduced its target short-term interest rate-its traditional economic
tool-virtually to zero, the Fed is discussing new ways to avert a full-scale
depression, all of which involve a vast and expanding transfer of cash to
banks and other major financial institutions-ultimately at taxpayer expense.
"The focus of the Committee's policy going forward," the Fed wrote, "will be
to support the functioning of financial markets and stimulate the economy
through open market operations and other measures that sustain the size of
the Federal Reserve's balance sheet at a high level."

As a result of lending programs and bailouts already undertaken, including
those involving financial giants that either failed or are tottering on the
brink such as Bear Stearns, Merrill Lynch, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, American
International Group and Citigroup, the Fed's balance sheet has ballooned
since September from about $900 billion to more than $2 trillion. New
programs to buy mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
and securities backed by auto loans and other forms of consumer debt will
drive the central bank's balance sheet to about $3 trillion.

The statement issued by the Fed on Tuesday suggested that it is prepared to
load its balance sheet with even more massive liabilities. The Fed declared
that it "stands ready to expand its purchases of agency [Fannie Mae, Freddie
Mac, Federal Home Loan] debt and mortgage-backed securities as conditions
warrant." It added that it is "also evaluating the potential benefits of
purchasing longer-term Treasury securities" and that it will "consider ways
of using its balance sheet to further support credit markets and economic
activity."

This implies that the Fed may begin buying up "toxic" mortgage-backed
securities that remain on the balance sheets of the major banks and continue
to generate huge losses for Wall Street. This was the stated purpose of the
$700 billion Troubled Assets Relief Program (TARP) when it was pushed by the
Bush administration and the congressional Democratic leadership as the
supposed cure-all for recession in September and early October.

Soon after the program was passed by Congress, however, Treasury Secretary
Henry Paulson reversed course and decided instead to use the fund to
directly transfer cash to the banks. The vast handout to the financial
establishment was made without imposing any serious conditions or controls,
and the banks have refused to use the government money to increase lending,
instead using the taxpayer funds to acquire smaller banks or simply hoard
the windfalls to bolster their balance sheets.

Meanwhile, the economy continues to plunge into recession, unemployment,
home foreclosures and poverty continue to soar, and virtually no social
relief is being provided by the government. On Monday, the Federal Reserve
reported that total industrial production in the US, including manufacturing
and energy output, declined by 0.6 percent in November from a month earlier,
and was off 5.5 percent from a year earlier.

Industrial output is on track to register its worst quarter since 1980, and
all indications are that it will decline further in the coming months.

The Commerce Department reported Tuesday that housing starts fell 18.9
percent in November to an annual rate of 625,000, the lowest figure since
the government began compiling statistics in 1959. They were down 47 percent
from the rate in November 2007, and were considerably lower than economic
forecasts. Building permits, an indicator of future residential
construction, declined 15.6 percent to a 616,000 pace, also the lowest on
record. They were down more than 48 percent from the previous year.

In an ominous sign that the economy is on the brink of a downward
deflationary spiral, the Labor Department reported Tuesday that the consumer
price index fell 1.7 percent last month, also worse than expected and a
record decline.

Also on Tuesday, Goldman Sachs reported a quarterly loss of $2.29 billion,
its first quarterly loss since the bank went public in 1999. Up to now
Goldman has suffered less damage from the credit and housing crisis than
other banks. Its plunge into the red makes clear that the financial system
remains highly fragile.

Economists at Macroeconomic Advisers LLC reported that the US gross domestic
product is on track to shrink by 6.5 percent in the current quarter, which
would make it the worse quarter since 1980.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2008/dec2008/rate-d17.shtml


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