Yellen, la número 2 del Fed defiende fervientemente la política de intereses cerca a cero hasta el 2914 y dice que el Fed actuara si la economía empeora.
ECONOMY Updated April 11, 2012, 10:52 p.m. ET
Fed's No. 2 Strongly Backs Low-Rate Policy
By JON HILSENRATH
The Federal Reserve's No. 2 official made an emphatic case for sticking to the central bank's low-interest-rate policies and said the Fed might need to take additional action to bolster the economy if the recovery once again falters.
Dow Jones Newswires managing editor Neal Lipschutz takes a seat on Mean Street to discuss the risks associated with the Fed making long-term predictions about low federal funds rates. Photo: Reuters.
Despite encouraging news on job growth in recent months, "labor market slack will remain substantial for a number of years to come," Fed Vice Chairwoman Janet Yellen argued in a speech in New York on Wednesday evening. That, and an expectation of subdued inflation, have justified the Fed's plan to keep short-term interest rates near zero until late 2014, Ms. Yellen said in an elaborate defense of the Fed's approach. Some of the Fed's internal economic models, in fact, suggested rates should stay low for even longer than planned, she noted.
"Further easing actions could be warranted if the recovery proceeds at a slower-than-expected pace," she added, though she took a balanced approach to the question of even easier-money policies by noting that a faster-than-expected recovery could warrant credit tightening sooner than expected.
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I see no need for still more accommodation at this time,' said Narayana Kocherlakota, Minneapolis Fed president.
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'It is way too early to conclude that the economy is sputtering,' said Dennis Lockhart, Atlanta Fed president.
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'Further easing actions could be warranted' if the recovery's pace is slower than expected, said Janet Yellen, Federal Reserve Vice Chair.
Associated Press
'I am beginning to hear that there are concerns…about cost-push pressures,' said Richard Fisher, Dallas Fed president.
Her remarks are important because the No. 2 at the Fed almost never veers from the stance of the chairman. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke last week made his own argument for keeping rates low to combat high unemployment.
The flurry of recent commentary offers clues ahead of the central bank's next policy meeting, April 24 and 25, when the Fed will update forecasts for growth, unemployment, inflation and interest rates. The Fed's near-term unemployment estimates for 2012 have likely improved, but officials have sounded unconvinced that the longer-term unemployment outlook has changed much.
Against that backdrop, officials seem unlikely to want to veer from the low-rates-to-2014 forecast that the central bank has been making since January. At the same time, it appears unlikely that the Fed is anywhere near being prepared to launch additional easing efforts.
Financial markets have see-sawed in recent weeks as investors have tried to discern whether the Fed wants to launch a new bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing. Ms. Yellen laid out one scenario in which she believed such a program might be warranted—if the unemployment rate, which was 8.2% in March, seems unlikely to drop below 8% by 2014. But the Fed isn't forecasting that scenario, and Ms. Yellen clearly wasn't advocating more bond-buying now. She is known as one of the Fed's more dovish officials, meaning she tends to advocate aggressive policies to combat high unemployment.
The Fed's more hawkish wing—which tends to worry most about inflation and stands against easy-money policies—is firmly against more action and has sought to register that opposition in recent days. Minneapolis Fed president Narayana Kocherlakota said Tuesday he saw "no need for still more accommodation" by the Fed and warned the central bank might need to raise short-term interest rates much sooner than the late 2014 date that the Fed has said is most likely.
But other Fed officials have lined up with Ms. Yellen's stance in recent days. Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Fed, Wednesday emphasized the need for a steady policy in comments to reporters at a Fed conference in Stone Mountain, Ga. Like Ms. Yellen, he said he doesn't see a need for the Fed to alter its projection that it will keep short-term interest rates near zero until late 2014.
He also doesn't see any need right now for the Fed to amplify its easy-money policies by launching a new bond-buying program.
"At the moment, I am still not convinced another round of (bond buying), at least in this time frame, would achieve a great deal," Mr. Lockhart said, adding that it was a policy to "hold in reserve" in case the economy takes a bad turn.