Oil prices hurt business, families — not growth
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8619240/WASHINGTON - High energy prices can put a strain on both families' and businesses' budgets, but so far they aren't seriously crimping overall economic activity, the president's top economist said Monday.
"High oil prices certainly have been a problem for Americans," said Ben Bernanke, the new chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers. "They are a burden on family budgets. They raise costs of production and reduce profits for firms."
"The higher oil prices so far have not depressed economic growth very substantially," Bernanke said. "I think that is a testament to the flexibility and adaptability of the U.S economy that it continues to grow despite this drag from energy prices.
The White House is predicting that gross domestic product will grow by 3.4 percent this year as measured from fourth quarter to fourth quarter. While that would be down from the 3.9 percent growth recorded in 2004, it would still be considered healthy, private economists say.
This is the mindset and the effect of republican engineering of the economy over Bush's term. Failing businesses, layoffs, vanishing savings, non-evistent safety net, exploding health costs and record numbers without health coverage, yet, the economy is still considered healthy.
Ben Bernanke, the new chairman of the
White House Council of Economic Advisers,
sees us bent over with stagnent incomes,
rising debt and, job insecurity,
aggravated by doubled gas prices
that threaten to stay doubled,
and he concludes that we're in the perfect position.