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Even if the Fed announces another round of bond purchases, some economists have questioned how much it might help. They note that mortgage rates and other key borrowing rates are already near record lows. After its August meeting, the Fed announced no changes in its policies. But in a statement afterward, it appeared to signal a growing willingness to take further steps to boost the economy if it doesn't improve. The Fed noted that growth had slowed in the first half of the year. In particular, it pointed to lackluster job growth and consumer spending. The issue of whether the Fed will announce any major moves in September was thrown into some doubt by economic improvements since its last meeting. Gains have been made in such areas as hiring, housing and consumer spending. Many analysts are looking to a speech by Bernanke on Aug. 31 at an annual Fed conference in Jackson Hole, Wyo., to provide further guidance on any new actions. In the view of some analysts, the Fed might still want to put off any major new bond-purchase program so it would have something in reserve in case the economy goes off a "fiscal cliff" at the end of the year. That's when tax increases and deep spending cuts will take effect unless Congress reaches a budget agreement.
On Wednesday, the Congressional Budget Office warned that if the fiscal crisis remained unresolved all next year, it would probably tip the U.S. economy into a recession. The CBO estimated that the economy would shrink 0.5 percent in 2013. Unemployment would rise to around 9 percent by late next year as a result of the spending cuts and tax increases, the CBO said. The Fed still remains divided over the need for further policy action. In a speech this week, Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta regional Fed bank and a voting member of the Fed's policy committee, said "there was a risk to monetary policy being employed too aggressively and without effect." Still, the minutes seemed to indicate that those arguing for more support for the economy outnumber those arguing that the Fed has done enough. The economy grew at a lackluster annual rate of 1.5 percent in the July-September
-- even slower than the 2 percent growth rate from January through March. Many economists think growth in the second half of this year will remain around 2 percent
-- too weak to lower the unemployment rate.
[Associated
Press;
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