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Truman and other economists said they expect no major announcements. Rather, they think Bernanke will signal that the Fed is following events in Europe and would coordinate a response with the European Central Bank should the crisis deteriorate. Worries about Greek debt could spread to other European nations with heavy debt burdens, such as Ireland, Portugal, Spain and perhaps Italy. U.S. banks and the U.S. economy would be at risk, too. "The European debt crisis has the potential to have as big an impact as the subprime mortgage crisis did in the United States," said Sung Won Sohn, an economics professor at California State University. "If it spreads to Spain and Italy, then the global economy could be facing huge problems." When the European debt crisis first shook markets last year, the Fed renewed agreements with European central banks to supply dollars to them if they ran short. The central banks would lend the dollars to commercial banks. In return, the Fed would receive European currencies to hold until the dollars were repaid. The Fed could also pursue stepped-up lending to financial firms through its emergency loan program, called the discount window. And it could resume the unorthodox loan programs it used during the financial crisis when credit froze up. One involves emergency loans that go beyond the discount window. Another is backing for "commercial paper"
-- the short-term loans that many U.S. companies use to finance needs from salaries to supplies. European banks, through their U.S. subsidiaries, used the Fed's emergency loan programs. Those revelations have sparked criticism in Congress that U.S. taxpayers shouldn't be required to prop up European banks. But others say that to safeguard the global financial system, the Fed must serve as a lender of last resort to any U.S. bank, including branches of foreign banks. They note that U.S. banks in Europe receive the same privileges from European central banks. "The Fed sees the loans as doing its job to protect the U.S. financial system during a credit crisis," said David Jones, head of DMJ Economic Advisors, a Denver-based consulting firm, and author of several books on the Fed.
[Associated
Press;
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