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Testimony
Chairman Ben S. Bernanke

Current economic and financial conditions and the federal budget

Before the Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of Representatives, Washington, D.C.

June 3, 2009
Chairman Spratt, Ranking Member Ryan, and other members of the Committee, I am pleased to
have this opportunity to offer my views on current economic and financial conditions and on issues
pertaining to the federal budget.
Economic Developments and Outlook
The U.S. economy has contracted sharply since last fall, with real gross domestic product (GDP)
having dropped at an average annual rate of about 6 percent during the fourth quarter of 2008 and
the first quarter of this year. Among the enormous costs of the downturn is the loss of nearly 6
million jobs since the beginning of 2008. The most recent information on the labor market--the
number of new and continuing claims for unemployment insurance through late May--suggests that
sizable job losses and further increases in unemployment are likely over the next few months.
However, the recent data also suggest that the pace of economic contraction may be slowing.
Notably, consumer spending, which dropped sharply in the second half of last year, has been
roughly flat since the turn of the year, and consumer sentiment has improved. In coming months,
households' spending power will be boosted by the fiscal stimulus program. Nonetheless, a number
of factors are likely to continue to weigh on consumer spending, among them the weak labor
market, the declines in equity and housing wealth that households have experienced over the past
two years, and still-tight credit conditions.
Activity in the housing market, after a long period of decline, has also shown some signs of
bottoming. Sales of existing homes have been fairly stable since late last year, and sales of new
homes seem to have flattened out in the past couple of monthly readings, though both remain at
depressed levels. Meanwhile, construction of new homes has been sufficiently restrained to allow
the backlog of unsold new homes to decline--a precondition for any recovery in homebuilding.
Businesses remain very cautious and continue to reduce their workforces and capital investments.
On a more positive note, firms are making progress in shedding the unwanted inventories that they
accumulated following last fall's sharp downturn in sales. The Commerce Department estimates that
the pace of inventory liquidation quickened in the first quarter, accounting for a sizable portion of
the reported decline in real GDP in that period. As inventory stocks move into better alignment with
sales, firms should become more willing to increase production.
We continue to expect overall economic activity to bottom out, and then to turn up later this year.
Our assessments that consumer spending and housing demand will stabilize and that the pace of
inventory liquidation will slow are key building blocks of that forecast. Final demand should also be
supported by fiscal and monetary stimulus, and U.S. exports may benefit if recent signs of
stabilization in foreign economic activity prove accurate. An important caveat is that our forecast
also assumes continuing gradual repair of the financial system and an associated improvement in
credit conditions; a relapse in the financial sector would be a significant drag on economic activity
and could cause the incipient recovery to stall. I will provide a brief update on financial markets in a
moment.

Even after a recovery gets under way, the rate of growth of real economic activity is likely to remain
below its longer-run potential for a while, implying that the current slack in resource utilization will
increase further. We expect that the recovery will only gradually gain momentum and that economic
slack will diminish slowly. In particular, businesses are likely to be cautious about hiring, and the
unemployment rate is likely to rise for a time, even after economic growth resumes.
In this environment, we anticipate that inflation will remain low. The slack in resource utilization
remains sizable, and, notwithstanding recent increases in the prices of oil and other commodities,
cost pressures generally remain subdued. As a consequence, inflation is likely to move down some
over the next year relative to its pace in 2008. That said, improving economic conditions and stable
inflation expectations should limit further declines in inflation.
Conditions in Financial Markets
Conditions in a number of financial markets have improved since earlier this year, likely reflecting
both policy actions taken by the Federal Reserve and other agencies as well as the somewhat better
economic outlook. Nevertheless, financial markets and financial institutions remain under stress,
and low asset prices and tight credit conditions continue to restrain economic activity.
Among the markets where functioning has improved recently are those for short-term funding,
including the interbank lending markets and the commercial paper market. Risk spreads in those
markets appear to have moderated, and more lending is taking place at longer maturities. The better
performance of short-term funding markets in part reflects the support afforded by Federal Reserve
lending programs. It is encouraging that the private sector’s reliance on the Fed’s programs has
declined as market stresses have eased, an outcome that was one of our key objectives when we
designed our interventions. The issuance of asset-backed securities (ABS) backed by credit card,
auto, and student loans has also picked up this spring, and ABS funding rates have declined,
developments supported by the availability of the Federal Reserve’s Term Asset-Backed Securities
Loan Facility as a market backstop.
In markets for longer-term credit, bond issuance by nonfinancial firms has been relatively strong
recently, and spreads between Treasury yields and rates paid by corporate borrowers have narrowed
some, though they remain wide. Mortgage rates and spreads have also been reduced by the Federal
Reserve's program of purchasing agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities. However, in
recent weeks, yields on longer-term Treasury securities and fixed-rate mortgages have risen. These
increases appear to reflect concerns about large federal deficits but also other causes, including
greater optimism about the economic outlook, a reversal of flight-to-quality flows, and technical
factors related to the hedging of mortgage holdings.
As you know, last month, the federal bank regulatory agencies released the results of the
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP). The purpose of the exercise was to determine,
for each of the 19 U.S.-owned bank holding companies with assets exceeding $100 billion, a capital
buffer sufficient for them to remain strongly capitalized and able to lend to creditworthy borrowers
even if economic conditions over the next two years turn out to be worse than we currently expect.
According to the findings of the SCAP exercise, under the more adverse economic outlook, losses at
the 19 bank holding companies would total an estimated $600 billion during 2009 and 2010. After
taking account of potential resources to absorb those losses, including expected revenues, reserves,
and existing capital cushions, we determined that 10 of the 19 institutions should raise, collectively,
additional common equity of $75 billion.
Each of the 10 bank holding companies requiring an additional buffer has committed to raise this
capital by November 9. We are in discussions with these firms on their capital plans, which are due
by June 8. Even in advance of those plans being approved, the 10 firms have among them already
raised more than $36 billion of new common equity, with a number of their offerings of common
shares being over-subscribed. In addition, these firms have announced actions that would generate
up to an additional $12 billon of common equity. We expect further announcements shortly as their
capital plans are finalized and submitted to supervisors. The substantial progress these firms have
made in meeting their required capital buffers, and their success in raising private capital, suggests

that investors are gaining greater confidence in the banking system.
Fiscal Policy in the Current Economic and Financial Environment
Let me now turn to fiscal matters. As you are well aware, in February of this year, the Congress
passed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, or ARRA, a major fiscal package aimed at
strengthening near-term economic activity. The package included personal tax cuts and increases in
transfer payments intended to stimulate household spending, incentives for business investment,
increases in federal purchases, and federal grants for state and local governments.
Predicting the effects of these fiscal actions on economic activity is difficult, especially in light of
the unusual economic circumstances that we face. For example, households confronted with
declining incomes and limited access to credit might be expected to spend most of their tax cuts;
then again, heightened economic uncertainties and the desire to increase precautionary saving or pay
down debt might reduce households’ propensity to spend. Likewise, it is difficult to judge how
quickly funds dedicated to infrastructure needs and other longer-term projects will be spent and how
large any follow-on effects will be. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has constructed a
range of estimates of the effects of the stimulus package on real GDP and employment that
appropriately reflects these uncertainties. According to the CBO's estimates, by the end of 2010, the
stimulus package could boost the level of real GDP between about 1 percent and a little more than 3
percent and the level of employment by between roughly 1 million and 3-1/2 million jobs.
The increases in spending and reductions in taxes associated with the fiscal package and the
financial stabilization program, along with the losses in revenues and increases in income-support
payments associated with the weak economy, will widen the federal budget deficit substantially this
year. The Administration recently submitted a proposed budget that projects the federal deficit to
reach about $1.8 trillion this fiscal year before declining to $1.3 trillion in 2010 and roughly $900
billion in 2011. As a consequence of this elevated level of borrowing, the ratio of federal debt held
by the public to nominal GDP is likely to move up from about 40 percent before the onset of the
financial crisis to about 70 percent in 2011. These developments would leave the debt-to-GDP ratio
at its highest level since the early 1950s, the years following the massive debt buildup during World
War II.
Certainly, our economy and financial markets face extraordinary near-term challenges, and strong
and timely actions to respond to those challenges are necessary and appropriate. Nevertheless, even
as we take steps to address the recession and threats to financial stability, maintaining the
confidence of the financial markets requires that we, as a nation, begin planning now for the
restoration of fiscal balance. Prompt attention to questions of fiscal sustainability is particularly
critical because of the coming budgetary and economic challenges associated with the retirement of
the baby-boom generation and continued increases in medical costs. The recent projections from the
Social Security and Medicare trustees show that, in the absence of programmatic changes, Social
Security and Medicare outlays will together increase from about 8-1/2 percent of GDP today to 10
percent by 2020 and 12-1/2 percent by 2030. With the ratio of debt to GDP already elevated, we
will not be able to continue borrowing indefinitely to meet these demands.
Addressing the country's fiscal problems will require a willingness to make difficult choices. In the
end, the fundamental decision that the Congress, the Administration, and the American people must
confront is how large a share of the nation's economic resources to devote to federal government
programs, including entitlement programs. Crucially, whatever size of government is chosen, tax
rates must ultimately be set at a level sufficient to achieve an appropriate balance of spending and
revenues in the long run. In particular, over the longer term, achieving fiscal sustainability--defined,
for example, as a situation in which the ratios of government debt and interest payments to GDP are
stable or declining, and tax rates are not so high as to impede economic growth--requires that
spending and budget deficits be well controlled.
Clearly, the Congress and the Administration face formidable near-term challenges that must be
addressed. But those near-term challenges must not be allowed to hinder timely consideration of the
steps needed to address fiscal imbalances. Unless we demonstrate a strong commitment to fiscal

sustainability in the longer term, we will have neither financial stability nor healthy economic
growth.
Federal Reserve Transparency
Let me close today with an update on the Federal Reserve's initiatives to enhance the transparency
of our credit and liquidity programs. As I noted last month in my testimony before the Joint
Economic Committee, I asked Vice Chairman Kohn to lead a review of our disclosure policies, with
the goal of increasing the range of information that we make available to the public.1 That group has
made significant progress, and we expect to begin publishing soon a monthly report on the Fed's
balance sheet and lending programs that will summarize and discuss recent developments and
provide considerable new information concerning the number of borrowers at our various facilities,
the concentration of borrowing, and the collateral pledged. In addition, the reports will provide
quarterly updates of key elements of the Federal Reserve's annual financial statements, including
information regarding the System Open Market Account portfolio, our loan programs, and the
special purpose vehicles that are consolidated on the balance sheet of the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York. We hope that this information will be helpful to the Congress and others with an interest
in the Federal Reserve's actions to address the financial crisis and the economic downturn. We will
continue to look for opportunities to broaden the scope of the information and supporting analysis
that we provide to the public.

Footnotes
1. Ben S. Bernanke (2009), "The Economic Outlook," statement before the Joint Economic
Committee, U.S. Congress, May 5. Return to text
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