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unhappycamper Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-07-10 07:19 AM
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U.S. Monetary Policy: Too Much of the Bad


U.S. Monetary Policy: Too Much of the Bad
der Standard, Austria
By Lukas Sustala
5 November 2010
Edited by Sam Carter

Ben Bernanke’s policies don’t help the American economy as much as they do global investment markets.

The Fed just won’t give up. It continues to pump more money into the banking and financial systems in an attempt to get the U.S. economy up and running again. $600 billion more will now be invested in U.S. government bonds — money that comes out of nowhere.

But this $600 billion (about €422 billion) won’t fire up the economic engine either because the U.S. economy doesn’t suffer from excessive interest rates, it suffers from excessive debt. Central bankers won’t be able to create a recovery with cheaper consumer credit.

On the contrary: Fed chief Bernanke isn’t helping the U.S. economy as much as he’s helping global securities markets. Low U.S. interest rates are causing an outflow of money into funds that invest in emerging economies or in high-yield bonds. The flow of money to Asia is already higher than it was prior to the crisis. Cheap money provided by the Fed is streaming to those places offering significantly higher interest rates.

The result: countries like Australia and Brazil are being showered with investor cash and commodities markets are at new record highs. That includes the all-important markets trading in foodstuffs. In a globalized world, a central bank can’t lift its own economy from the ashes, but it certainly can inundate other countries with cheap money.
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OHdem10 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Nov-07-10 08:09 AM
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1. Ben Bernanke and Geithner asked for a second stimulus.
So far Congress has refused. Bernanke is now doing
what he has to do to keep us out of the ditch.

I am not talking about the first stimulus.

I am talking in the last couple of months.

Bernanke appeared before Congress and suggested
a second stimulus could be in order. If they
did not agree, he would use Monetary Policy.

Monetary Policy helps Wall Street more than
Main Street. Congress made a choice.
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