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Bernanke said unemployment is likely to be around 8 percent two years from now. Other threats to the economic outlook, Bernanke said, are: - A depressed housing market, where growth in foreclosures could push down home prices even more. - Deeper spending cuts and more layoffs from state and local governments. - Rising gasoline prices, which now top $3 a gallon. Bernanke also argued for Congress and the White House to come up with a long-term plan to reduce the government's trillion-plus-dollar budget deficits. However, he warned them not to slash spending or boost taxes now because the economy is too fragile. President Barack Obama's debt commission at the end of last year failed to reach a consensus on a deficit-reduction plan. Over the coming decade, government deficits are estimated in the $10 trillion range. If Congress fails to come up with a reduction plan, the economy could be hurt, Bernanke said. Big deficits could force investors to demand more returns on government loans and interest rates could soar. Sen. Jeff Sessions of Alabama, the highest ranking Republican on the committee and a fiscal conservative, expressed concern that the Fed's bond-buying program could spur inflation. And he wondered whether the Fed was simply printing money to cover the nation's deficits. Bernanke countered that the program won't expand the amount of money in circulation in a significant way because banks aren't lending the money. It's not a situation "where the Fed is dumping money into the economy," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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