"By Vivien Lou Chen
Jan. 4 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans supported plans for large U.S. fiscal stimulus( GOOD ) while saying such policy is “sobering”( SCARY ) because of “significant stress” confronting the federal balance sheet.
“By historical standards, our current fiscal debt is not unusually large,” Evans said yesterday in a speech in San Francisco. “But our expected future obligations are enormous.”( TRUE )
President-elect Barack Obama is working on a stimulus package of tax cuts and spending on roads, bridges and other infrastructure to create or save 3 million jobs. His advisers and congressional Democrats say the plan may total $850 billion, while economists and a group of Democratic governors led by New Jersey’s Jon Corzine have called for a $1 trillion outlay.
Recent economic data shows U.S. consumer confidence sinking to the lowest level in at least 41 years, home prices in 20 major cities falling at the fastest rate on record and a decline in U.S. manufacturing deepening.
“I believe a big stimulus is appropriate,” Evans, 50, said during the annual meeting of the Allied Social Science Associations. “But it is also sobering to be deploying( ? ) large amounts of taxpayer funds at a time when our fiscal balance sheet is already coming under significant stress,” he said, noting the federal debt is equal to 38 percent of gross domestic product.
Fed policy makers cut the main U.S. interest rate last month to as low as zero( ZIRP ) for the first time in an effort to end the longest economic slump in a quarter-century.
‘Two-headed Dragon’
The central bank confronts a “two-headed dragon”( MAKING THE FED, WHAT? KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE? ) of deflation and a return of 1970s-style inflation( ONE AFTER THE OTHER ), St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said yesterday during a panel discussion sponsored by the National Association for Business Economics in San Francisco. “We’re not in a deflationary environment yet,” though “longer-run deflation could ( YES ) become a reality.”
The Fed shifted its focus last month to the amount and type of debt it buys, with a senior official saying that announcements of new lending programs or asset purchases will now be principal signals of policy.( THIS SCARES JOHN TAYLOR, MAKING IT A THREE-HEADED DRAGON )
One of the challenges confronting policy makers is “calibrating these unfamiliar policies and, in the future, determining the appropriate time and methods( THE SWEDISH PLAN WOULD HAVE MADE THIS EASIER ) for winding them down( TRUE ),” Evans said.
“Policy makers face another very important challenge,” he said. “In a complex and dynamic environment, the public needs effective and transparent communications( I AGREE, BUT IT'S NOT HAPPENING. ). As our lending facilities and other policy responses continue to evolve, this is a daunting task.”
‘Greatest Challenge’
“Undoubtedly, the greatest challenge we face is the enormous uncertainty( FEAR AND AVERSION TO RISK. THE MAIN PROBLEM NOW. ) of the situation,” he said.
The Conference Board’s sentiment index unexpectedly fell to 38, the lowest reading since records began in 1967, the New York- based private research group said Dec. 30.
The S&P/Case-Shiller index of home prices declined 18 percent in the 12 months to October after dropping 17.4 percent in September. The gauge has fallen every month since January 2007.
The Institute for Supply Management’s factory index fell to 32.4, the lowest level since 1980. Readings less than 50 signal contraction.
Evans took office in September 2007, replacing Michael Moskow. Evans, a former director of research and senior vice president at the bank, is set to vote on interest rates this year.
He said the Fed should concentrate on designing regulatory( SUPERVISORY ) policies “aimed at helping to prevent and protect against the consequences of asset price bubbles.” At the same time, such an aggressive campaign might “entail large downside costs if the assessment proves to be wrong( THAT'S THE PROBLEM ),” Evans said.
To contact the reporter on this story: Vivien Lou Chen in San Francisco at vchen1@bloomberg.net"
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