By Robert Borosage
Campaign for America's Future
ourfuture.org
In his congressional testimony yesterday, Federal Reserve Chair Ben
Bernanke called out the Congress, telling them to stop the reckless and
mindless spending cuts that are killing jobs and growth. Their
stupidity, he suggested, poses the biggest threat to Americans going
back to work.
Of course, he didn’t phrase it quite like that. His testimony was
purposefully vanilla, designed not to cause indigestion on Wall Street.
But that didn’t stop him from calling out the Congress. In his first
sentence he stated:
“The economic recovery has continued at a moderate pace in recent quarters despite the strong headwinds created by federal fiscal policy.”
Translated: If you idiots abandoned your destructive austerity fetish, we might be able to put people back to work.
The Congressional Budget Office reports
that the deficit has come down, as percentage of the economy, by about
60 percent since 2009. It’s dropping at a faster drop than any time
since the demobilization after World War II, far exceeding any prudent
speed limit.
Washington is celebrating economic growth, with job production
averaging about 200,000 a month this year. But the Fed Chair is more
sober:
“[T] he jobs situation is far from satisfactory, as the
unemployment rate remains well above its longer-run normal level, and
rates of underemployment and long-term unemployment are still much too
high.”
In fact, the economy barely has a pulse. The Fed “Beige book” projects second quarter growth from April to June at 1 percent or less, the third straight quarter under 2 percent. We are closer to a return to recession than a return to health.
And, inflation is at the lowest pace on record – about 1 percent over
the past year. Bernanke felt it necessary to warn explicitly about the
risk of deflation – of prices falling, which devastates debtors and
homeowners and would torpedo any recovery.
“[V]ery low inflation poses risks to economic performance – for
example, by raising the real cost of capital investment – and increases
the risk of outright deflation.”
So Bernanke reassured markets that despite the pressure from
conservatives in the Congress and ideologues in economic departments,
the Fed would continue its extraordinary measures – short-term interest
rates near zero, and the purchase of $85 billion a month in
mortgage-backed securities and treasuries until things get better.
The Fed does anticipate that things will get better. The biggest
risk: That the Congress will screw things up. Or in Bernanke language:
“The risks remain that tight federal fiscal policy will restrain economic growth over the next few quarters by more than we currently expect, or that the debate concerning other fiscal policy issues, such as the status of the debt ceiling, will evolve in a way that could hamper the recovery,”
Bernanke’s testimony received little coverage since it did not shake
the markets. His warnings also had little effect on the Congress.
Republicans in the Congress are gearing up for another fight this
fall on the budget, the sequester cuts and the debt ceiling. They are
insisting on more cuts from domestic programs – education, child
nutrition, research and development, more sequester cuts (only from
domestic services) and plotting a face-off over the debt ceiling to
exact deep cuts in basic security guarantees – Medicare, Medicaid and
Social Security.
If nothing changes, Congress will continue to sabotage the economy,
cost jobs and put the weak recovery at risk. Warnings by the
conservative head of the International Monetary Fund and the
conservative Republican head of the Federal Reserve fall on deaf ears.
Republicans are intent on laying waste to government. The White House
seems unable or unwilling to make the case clearly for jobs.
The Federal Reserve, as Bernanke noted, will continue to do what it
can to keep the economy from sinking. But he sure wishes that Congress
would stop punching holes in the bottom of the boat.
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