My comment: It seems that the fight between the two traditional
schools, financial policy lead vs. economic policy lead, is served in
the US arena. in USA, since late seventies until now, economic
policies have been excluded of governmental scope, supposedly, the
free market arena would balance and feed economic growth. The opposite
approach has been politically incorrect and has deserved the stigma
(in USA) of "socialist", "communist", etc. Even worse, students in US
universities have not had the opportunity to learn theories that cope
both with financial and economic policies but to point at them as the
cause of failure of the Soviet Union. To mix politic ideology and
economics is risky. In my opinion, at the end of the day, those
economists nurtured into financial-monetaristic arms lack skills to
face this new scenario and are unable to understand the real problems
and how to cope with them.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=ab2o7GekQXwo&refer=home

Jan. 13 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke warned
that a fiscal stimulus won’t be enough to spur an economic recovery
and that the government may need to buy or guarantee banks’ tainted
assets to revive growth.

“Fiscal actions are unlikely to promote a lasting recovery unless they
are accompanied by strong measures to further stabilize and strengthen
the financial system,” Bernanke said in the text of a speech today at
the London School of Economics. “More capital injections and
guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and the
normalization of credit markets.”

Bernanke’s remarks indicate he may be seeking to influence
deliberations among lawmakers and President-elect Barack Obama’s
economic aides on how to deploy the next $350 billion of the financial-
rescue fund approved in October. While some Democrats have focused on
offering aid to troubled homeowners, the Fed chief’s comments show
he’s more concerned about a continued choking off of credit to
companies and households.

The Fed chairman recommended three approaches on troubled assets.
Public purchases of the bad assets are one possibility, as was
originally planned under U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s
Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP.

The government could also agree to absorb, in exchange for warrants or
a fee, part of the losses on a specified portfolio of troubled assets,
he said. Regulators used that method recently with their bailout of
Citigroup Inc.

‘Bad Banks’

Another measure “would be to set up and capitalize so- called bad
banks, which would purchase assets from financial institutions in
exchange for cash and equity in the bad banks,” he said.

While the U.S. Treasury has already channeled $350 billion in taxpayer
funds to recapitalize banks and rescue companies including American
International Group Inc. and Citigroup, financial stocks have been
hammered in recent days amid deepening concern about credit losses.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 Financials Index has lost 14 percent in the
past four trading days. Citigroup yesterday slumped 17 percent to
$5.60.

U.S. stock-index futures slipped today, indicating the Standard &
Poor’s 500 Index may fall for a third day. Futures on the S&P 500
expiring in March retreated 0.2 percent to 866 at 8:47 a.m. in New
York. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures fell 15 points, or 0.2
percent, to 8,429. Nasdaq-100 Index futures declined less than 0.1
percent to 1,205.75.

Toxic Assets

Bernanke’s warning about toxic assets is “a call to use the second
half of TARP for what it was intended for,” said Christopher Low,
chief economist at FTN Financial in New York. “It was sold as
something to get the mortgage market functioning again, which is
something Congress would like to see because that gets back to
homeowners.”

Obama asked President George W. Bush yesterday to inform Congress of
the intent to release the second half of the $700 billion bailout
fund. Lawrence Summers, the incoming White House economic director,
pledged changes in how the TARP will be used, without offering
specifics in a letter to congressional leaders.

Obama is pressing Congress for a stimulus plan of about $775 billion,
including tax cuts and spending on everything from roads and schools
to the energy network, to help pull the world’s largest economy out of
a slump that’s in its second year.

Economists slashed forecasts for U.S. growth and projected the Fed
won’t be able to start raising interest rates until 2010, according to
a Bloomberg News survey published today. The economy will shrink 1.5
percent this year, a half percentage point more than projected last
month, according to the median of 59 forecasts in the survey taken
from Jan. 5 to Jan. 12.

Reduce Losses

Bernanke also said that efforts to reduce preventable foreclosures
“could strengthen the housing market and reduce mortgage losses” and
increase financial stability.

The Fed chairman said the favorable treatment that financial
institutions are receiving from the government is “unavoidable”
because the economy needs credit to grow. Still, aid should be
accompanied by stronger supervision and regulation, he said.

“Financial firms of any type whose failure would pose a systemic risk
must accept especially close regulatory scrutiny of their risk-
taking,” he said. “It is unacceptable that large firms that the
government is now compelled to support to preserve financial stability
were among the greatest risk-takers during the boom period.”

Bernanke reiterated his call for a regulatory procedure for resolving
a large, failing nonbank institution. The absence of such a process
hampered policy makers during the failures of Bear Stearns Cos. and
Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. last year.

Inhibiting Loans

“A continuing barrier to private investment in financial institutions
is the large quantity of troubled, hard-to-value assets that remain on
institutions’ balance sheets,” Bernanke said. “The presence of these
assets significantly increases uncertainty about the underlying value
of these institutions and may inhibit both new private investment and
new lending.”

The Fed chairman’s speech also presented a narration of the central
bank’s response to the crisis so far, and he said the U.S. central
bank still has “powerful tools” to influence growth and prices.

Bernanke has expanded the size and types of assets on the Fed’s
balance sheet more than any other chairman in the institution’s
history. During the past year he increased the Fed’s holdings by more
than $1 trillion, in part with credits that banks and brokers
considered too risky.

He said the Fed can continue to use communication to guide markets on
how the central bank’s economic outlook is likely to shape their
policy.

Near Zero

The central bank cut its main interest rate to as low as zero last
month and pledged to expand its assets if necessary. The Fed plans to
buy as much as $600 billion of bonds and mortgage-backed securities
sold by federally chartered mortgage finance companies.

The Federal Open Market Committee is also considering purchases of
longer-term Treasury securities. “In determining whether to proceed
with such purchases, the committee will focus on their potential to
improve conditions in private credit markets, such as mortgage
markets,” Bernanke said.

Fed officials will begin a program next month to bolster
securitization markets for consumer credit. The Term Asset-Backed
Securities Loan Facility, the Fed’s newest emergency program to
increase liquidity, will finance up to $200 billion in securities
backed by loans to small businesses, students, credit-card holders and
car buyers. The facility has $20 billion of support from the U.S.
Treasury.

If the program proves successful, “its basic framework can be expanded
to accommodate higher volumes of additional classes of securities as
circumstances warrant,” Bernanke said.

The Fed will “unwind” its emergency lending programs “when credit
markets and the economy have begun to recover,” Bernanke said. Policy
makers can then return to the “traditional means of making monetary
policy,” setting a target for the federal funds rate.
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