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--RESERVE INTEREST The Fed has discussed the possibility of trimming the scant 0.25 percent interest it pays banks on their excess reserves. The idea would be that if banks earned less interest, or none, on this money, they'd be more inclined to step up lending and boost the economy. But the minutes of the last meeting indicated that only "a couple" of Fed officials favored this move. Others expressed concern that trimming this small interest payment could disrupt the operation of money market funds. --OTHER OPTIONS One other possibility that appears under discussion would be linking the Fed's decisions on any rate increases not to a specific date but to the economy's health. Charles Evans, head of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, has said the Fed should consider pledging to keep rates at record lows until the unemployment rate drops to 7 percent. And the minutes of the last meeting indicated that Fed officials are pondering whether to drop any timetable and instead link any rate change to the economy's performance. Other Fed officials oppose this idea. They say it could raise the likelihood of higher inflation later. --NO HINTS Many analysts say that on Friday, Bernanke may merely review the economy's performance to date and repeat his pledge that the Fed is ready to act if growth doesn't improve. He might repeat the options available, without any hints of what the Fed might do in September.
Those who think Bernanke will take such an approach argue that the Fed remains divided and that Bernanke doesn't want to be seen as dictating a choice before the policy committee meets in September. Analysts differ on whether the Fed will act before the November election, given its long-held preference for keeping a low profile close to presidential elections. "The Fed doesn't like to move right before an election because they get accused of being partisan and favoring one candidate over the other," said David Wyss, a former Fed economist and now a professor at Brown University. But David Jones, who has written four books on the Fed, said he expects some form of Fed action in September. "Bernanke has already given us his criteria," Jones said. ""If economic growth remains so slow that he can't count on an improvement in labor market conditions in a sustainable way, then he will push for more Fed support."
[Associated
Press;
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