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President Barack Obama proposed a $447 billion plan last week to spur job growth, a mix of tax cuts and new spending. Economists figure it could boost economic growth by 2 percentage points and add 2 million jobs. Hanson and others doubt that Obama's entire proposal will make it through Congress, though. The first hints of "Operation Twist" could come Sept. 21, at the end of the Fed's next policy meeting. Fed-watchers named it after a move by the Kennedy administration in 1961 to cut long-term rates without touching short-term rates. At the time, Chubby Checker's Twist was the dance craze. The Fed has outlined the basics steps: It would buy long-term Treasurys with cash raised from unloading Treasurys due in the next few years. Wall Street economists estimate the Fed could spend between $200 billion and $300 billion. In theory, that should put pressure on long-term interest rates to fall even further and encourage people and businesses to spend more because borrowing money will be cheaper. "It's a low-risk way to help the economy," says Thomas Simons, market economist at Jefferies. But it's a low-risk effort that will probably yield low rewards. The interest rate on the 10-year Treasury note, a benchmark for loans across the economy, may not budge.
And besides, there's little evidence falling long-term interest rates are doing much good, Goldman's economists say. Many economists and investors believe the Fed's move will give stocks a lift. When the Fed buys bonds, it drives up the prices, which makes stocks a more attractive investment by comparison. That's a goal for the Fed because a rising stock market lifts confidence in the economy as a whole. The problem is that rates are already at historic lows
-- and it hasn't stopped money managers from pouring money into Treasurys. "The cost of borrowing isn't really the problem," says Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics. Before the financial crisis hit in 2008, lower borrowing costs usually encouraged companies to spend more and homeowners to refinance their mortgages. Not anymore. Companies are sitting on $2.9 trillion in cash and afraid to hire people until demand picks up. And not enough people are taking advantage of low interest rates to turn around the housing market. So should the Fed even try "Operation Twist"? "It's the best tool they've got," Ashworth says. "I don't think it's going to hurt, but I don't think it's going to help much, either. Still, that doesn't mean they shouldn't try."
[Associated
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