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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EDT
October 4, 2011

Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Joint Economic Committee
U.S. Congress
October 4, 2011

Chairman Casey, Vice Chairman Brady, and other members of the Committee, I
appreciate this opportunity to discuss the economic outlook and recent monetary policy actions.
It has been three years since the beginning of the most intense phase of the financial crisis
in the late summer and fall of 2008, and more than two years since the economic recovery began
in June 2009. There have been some positive developments: The functioning of financial
markets and the banking system in the United States has improved significantly. Manufacturing
production in the United States has risen nearly 15 percent since its trough, driven substantially
by growth in exports; indeed, the U.S. trade deficit has been notably lower recently than it was
before the crisis, reflecting in part the improved competitiveness of U.S. goods and services.
Business investment in equipment and software has continued to expand, and productivity gains
in some industries have been impressive. Nevertheless, it is clear that, overall, the recovery from
the crisis has been much less robust than we had hoped. Recent revisions of government
economic data show the recession as having been even deeper, and the recovery weaker, than
previously estimated; indeed, by the second quarter of this year--the latest quarter for which
official estimates are available--aggregate output in the United States still had not returned to the
level that it had attained before the crisis. Slow economic growth has in turn led to slow rates of
increase in jobs and household incomes.
The pattern of sluggish growth was particularly evident in the first half of this year, with
real gross domestic product (GDP) estimated to have increased at an average annual rate of less
than 1 percent. Some of this weakness can be attributed to temporary factors. Notably, earlier
this year, political unrest in the Middle East and North Africa, strong growth in emerging market
economies, and other developments contributed to significant increases in the prices of oil and
other commodities, which damped consumer purchasing power and spending; and the disaster in

-2Japan disrupted global supply chains and production, particularly in the automobile industry.
With commodity prices having come off their highs and manufacturers’ problems with supply
chains well along toward resolution, growth in the second half of the year seems likely to be
more rapid than in the first half.
However, the incoming data suggest that other, more persistent factors also continue to
restrain the pace of recovery. Consequently, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) now
expects a somewhat slower pace of economic growth over coming quarters than it did at the time
of the June meeting, when Committee participants most recently submitted economic forecasts.
Consumer behavior has both reflected and contributed to the slow pace of recovery.
Households have been very cautious in their spending decisions, as declines in house prices and
in the values of financial assets have reduced household wealth, and many families continue to
struggle with high debt burdens or reduced access to credit. Probably the most significant factor
depressing consumer confidence, however, has been the poor performance of the job market.
Over the summer, private payrolls rose by only about 100,000 jobs per month on average--half
of the rate posted earlier in the year.1 Meanwhile, state and local governments have continued to
shed jobs, as they have been doing for more than two years. With these weak gains in
employment, the unemployment rate has held close to 9 percent since early this year. Moreover,
recent indicators, including new claims for unemployment insurance and surveys of hiring plans,
point to the likelihood of more sluggish job growth in the period ahead.
Other sectors of the economy are also contributing to the slower-than-expected rate of
expansion. The housing sector has been a significant driver of recovery from most recessions in
the United States since World War II. This time, however, a number of factors--including the

1

The figure of 100,000 private jobs per month adjusts for the effects of the two-week strike by communications
workers at Verizon, which held down measured payrolls in August.

-3overhang of distressed and foreclosed properties, tight credit conditions for builders and potential
homebuyers, and the large number of “underwater” mortgages (on which homeowners owe more
than their homes are worth)--have left the rate of new home construction at only about one-third
of its average level in recent decades.
In the financial sphere, as I noted, banking and financial conditions in the United States
have improved significantly since the depths of the crisis. Nonetheless, financial stresses persist.
Credit remains tight for many households, small businesses, and residential and commercial
builders, in part because weaker balance sheets and income prospects have increased the
perceived credit risk of many potential borrowers. We have also recently seen bouts of elevated
volatility and risk aversion in financial markets, partly in reaction to fiscal concerns both here
and abroad. Domestically, the controversy during the summer regarding the raising of the
federal debt ceiling and the downgrade of the U.S. long-term credit rating by one of the major
rating agencies contributed to the financial turbulence that occurred around that time. Outside
the United States, concerns about sovereign debt in Greece and other euro-zone countries, as
well as about the sovereign debt exposures of the European banking system, have been a
significant source of stress in global financial markets. European leaders are strongly committed
to addressing these issues, but the need to obtain agreement among a large number of countries
to put in place necessary backstops and to address the sources of the fiscal problems has slowed
the process of finding solutions. It is difficult to judge how much these financial strains have
affected U.S. economic activity thus far, but there seems little doubt that they have hurt
household and business confidence, and that they pose ongoing risks to growth.
Another factor likely to weigh on the U.S. recovery is the increasing drag being exerted
by the government sector. Notably, state and local governments continue to tighten their belts by

-4cutting spending and employment in the face of ongoing budgetary pressures, while the future
course of federal fiscal policies remains quite uncertain.
To be sure, fiscal policymakers face a complex situation. I would submit that, in setting
tax and spending policies for now and the future, policymakers should consider at least four key
objectives. One crucial objective is to achieve long-run fiscal sustainability. The federal budget
is clearly not on a sustainable path at present. The Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction,
formed as part of the Budget Control Act, is charged with achieving $1.5 trillion in additional
deficit reduction over the next 10 years on top of the spending caps enacted this summer.
Accomplishing that goal would be a substantial step; however, more will be needed to achieve
fiscal sustainability.
A second important objective is to avoid fiscal actions that could impede the ongoing
economic recovery. These first two objectives are certainly not incompatible, as putting in place
a credible plan for reducing future deficits over the longer term does not preclude attending to
the implications of fiscal choices for the recovery in the near term. Third, fiscal policy should
aim to promote long-term growth and economic opportunity. As a nation, we need to think
carefully about how federal spending priorities and the design of the tax code affect the
productivity and vitality of our economy in the longer term. Fourth, there is evident need to
improve the process for making long-term budget decisions, to create greater predictability and
clarity, while avoiding disruptions to the financial markets and the economy. In sum, the nation
faces difficult and fundamental fiscal choices, which cannot be safely or responsibly postponed.
Returning to the discussion of the economic outlook, let me turn now to the prospects for
inflation. Prices of many commodities, notably oil, increased sharply earlier this year, as I noted,
leading to higher retail gasoline and food prices. In addition, producers of other goods and

-5services were able to pass through some of their higher input costs to their customers.
Separately, the global supply disruptions associated with the disaster in Japan put upward
pressure on prices of motor vehicles. As a result of these influences, inflation picked up during
the first half of this year; over that period, the price index for personal consumption expenditures
rose at an annual rate of about 3-1/2 percent, compared with an average of less than 1-1/2 percent
over the preceding two years.
As the FOMC anticipated, however, inflation has begun to moderate as these transitory
influences wane. In particular, the prices of oil and many other commodities have either leveled
off or have come down from their highs, and the step-up in automobile production has started to
reduce pressures on the prices of cars and light trucks. Importantly, the higher rate of inflation
experienced so far this year does not appear to have become ingrained in the economy. Longerterm inflation expectations have remained stable according to surveys of households and
economic forecasters, and the five-year-forward measure of inflation compensation derived from
yields on nominal and inflation-protected Treasury securities suggests that inflation expectations
among investors may have moved lower recently. In addition to the stability of longer-term
inflation expectations, the substantial amount of resource slack in U.S. labor and product markets
should continue to restrain inflationary pressures.
In view of the deterioration in the economic outlook over the summer and the subdued
inflation picture over the medium run, the FOMC has taken several steps recently to provide
additional policy accommodation. At the August meeting, the Committee provided greater
clarity about its outlook for the level of short-term interest rates by noting that economic
conditions were likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least
through mid-2013. And at our meeting in September, the Committee announced that it intends

-6to increase the average maturity of the securities in the Federal Reserve’s portfolio. Specifically,
it intends to purchase, by the end of June 2012, $400 billion of Treasury securities with
remaining maturities of 6 years to 30 years and to sell an equal amount of Treasury securities
with remaining maturities of 3 years or less, leaving the size of our balance sheet approximately
unchanged. This maturity extension program should put downward pressure on longer-term
interest rates and help make broader financial conditions more supportive of economic growth
than they would otherwise have been.
The Committee also announced in September that it will begin reinvesting principal
payments on its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities in agency
mortgage-backed securities rather than in longer-term Treasury securities. By helping to support
mortgage markets, this action too should contribute to a stronger economic recovery. The
Committee will continue to closely monitor economic developments and is prepared to take
further action as appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery in a context of price
stability.
Monetary policy can be a powerful tool, but it is not a panacea for the problems currently
faced by the U.S. economy. Fostering healthy growth and job creation is a shared responsibility
of all economic policymakers, in close cooperation with the private sector. Fiscal policy is of
critical importance, as I have noted today, but a wide range of other policies--pertaining to labor
markets, housing, trade, taxation, and regulation, for example--also have important roles to play.
For our part, we at the Federal Reserve will continue to work to help create an environment that
provides the greatest possible economic opportunity for all Americans.