WASHINGTON: US
Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke stepped up his warning Tuesday
over the looming 'fiscal cliff,' saying its mandatory tax hikes and
spending cuts pose a "substantial threat" to the country's economic
recovery.
With government leaders locked in crunch talks on
avoiding the cliff and slashing the budget deficit, Bernanke said that
rising cuts to federal government spending were already holding back
economic growth.
"Congress and the administration will need to
protect the economy from the full brunt of the severe fiscal tightening
at the beginning of next year that is built into current law -- the
so-called fiscal cliff," the US central bank chief said in a speech in
New York.
"The realization of all of the automatic tax increases
and spending cuts that make up the fiscal cliff, absent offsetting
changes, would pose a substantial threat to the recovery," he said,
according to the prepared text.
"Indeed, by the reckoning of the
Congressional Budget Office and that of many outside observers, a
fiscal shock of that size would send the economy toppling back into
recession."
Bernanke said the Fed already views growth as
disappointingly slow and troubled by threats from the eurozone crisis,
slow job creation and the reticence of banks to loosen lending standards
-- which Bernanke said is holding back recovery in the housing sector.
The
unemployment rate, currently 7.9 percent, remains "well above" what Fed
officials want to see, Bernanke said, adding that the country has "some
way to go before the labour market can be deemed healthy again."
But
Bernanke pointed out that pressures to wind up the stimulus programs
and other policy actions designed to pull the country out of recession,
and stepped-up efforts to rapidly reduce the federal budget deficit, are
now "restraining" gross domestic product growth.
"Indeed, under
almost any plausible scenario, next year the drag from federal fiscal
policy on GDP growth will outweigh the positive effects on growth from
fiscal expansion at the state and local level," he said.
Bernanke's
warning came as the White House and top officials from Congress are
locked in talks to avert the cliff and set a long-term plan for reducing
the deficit, which has topped $1 trillion a year for four years
running.
The cliff comprises two challenges: a drastic spending
reduction program, and the expiration of a broad range of "temporary"
tax decreases.
Both are to take place on January 1, and together
would suck at least $500 billion out of the economy, forcing it into
recession.
Republicans and Democrats though have sharply
differed on what kind of long-term spending reductions and increases in
tax revenues should be put in place to replace the cliff.
Bernanke
said that the deficit is "on an unsustainable path," requiring a
"credible framework" to stabilize and reduce the country's debt and
deficit load.
But he warned policy makers "to avoid
unnecessarily adding to the headwinds that are already holding back the
economic recovery."
"Preventing a sudden and severe contraction
in fiscal policy early next year will support the transition of the
economy back to full employment."
No comments:
Post a Comment