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- Cutting to zero the interest the Fed pays for banks to keep money parked at the Fed. That rate is now 0.25 percent. The goal would be to induce banks to withdraw their money from the Fed and lend it instead. "The issue at this stage is not whether we have the tools to help support economic activity and guard against disinflation," Bernanke said. "We do. The issue is instead whether, at any given juncture, the benefits of each tool, in terms of additional stimulus, outweigh the associated costs or risks of using each tool." The Fed's strategy carries no guarantees. Short-term interest rates near zero have yet to rejuvenate the economy. The benefits of federal stimulus programs are fading, and Congress has declined to pass any major new economic aid. Bernanke is under intense pressure to provide relief yet has no easy options for fixing the economy. Hoenig likened Bernanke's job to that of a horse whisperer: Both must watch their body language and avoid inciting any panic. "There is a lot in common with a horse whisperer and a good central banker, I think," he says. At a Fed meeting earlier this month, Bernanke persuaded his colleagues to use a relatively small amount of money generated by its portfolio of mortgage securities to buy government debt. The goal is to further ease rates on mortgages and other loans. The economy, which has been slowing all year, barely grew in the spring
-- it eked out a 1.6 percent annual growth rate in the April-to-June period. At such a tepid pace, the nation's 9.5 percent unemployment rate could climb and pass 10 percent later this year or early next year, some analysts say.
The gravest risk is that consumers could turn even more cautious about spending and businesses more nervous about hiring
-- causing the economy not just to stall but to slip into reverse. Just a year ago, Bernanke and others attending the conference had been breathing a sign of relief that the worst of the financial crisis had passed. This year, they are holding their breath again. Last year, Bernanke made time for a hike. Not so this year. Yet despite the economy's recent slowing, Bernanke said he continues to believe there will be "some pickup" in growth in 2011, if not enough to substantially drive down unemployment and reduce the vast ranks of the unemployed. "We have come a long way, but there is still some way to travel," Bernanke said.
[Associated
Press;
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