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For release on delivery
12:45 p.m. EST
December 7, 2009

Frequently Asked Questions

Remarks by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at
The Economic Club of Washington
Washington, D.C.

December 7, 2009

It is a pleasure to speak once again before the Economic Club of Washington.
Having faced the most serious financial crisis and the worst recession since the Great
Depression, our economy has made important progress during the past year. Although
the economic stress faced by many families and businesses remains intense, with job
openings scarce and credit still hard to come by, the financial system and the economy
have moved back from the brink of collapse, economic growth has returned, and the signs
of recovery have become more widespread.
Understandably, in a situation as complicated as this one, people have many
questions about the current situation and the path forward. Accordingly, taking
inspiration from the ubiquitous frequently-asked-questions lists, or FAQs, on Internet
websites, in my remarks today I’d like to address four important FAQs about the
economy and the Federal Reserve. They are:
1. Where is the economy headed?
2. What has the Federal Reserve been doing to support the economy and the
financial system?
3. Will the Federal Reserve’s actions lead to higher inflation down the road?
4. How can we avoid a similar crisis in the future?
Where Is the Economy Headed?
First, to understand where the economy might be headed, we should take a look at
where it has been recently. 1 A year ago, our economy--indeed, all of the world’s major
economies--were reeling from the effects of a devastating financial crisis. Policymakers
here and abroad had undertaken an extraordinary series of actions aimed at stabilizing the
1

For more discussion, see Ben S. Bernanke (2009), “On the Outlook for the Economy and Policy,” speech
delivered at the Economic Club of New York, New York, N.Y., November 16,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20091116a.htm.

-2financial system and cushioning the economic impact of the crisis. Critically, these
policy interventions succeeded in averting a global financial meltdown that could have
plunged the world into a second Great Depression. But although a global economic
cataclysm was avoided, the crisis nevertheless had widespread and severe economic
consequences, including deep recessions in most of the world’s major economies. In the
United States, the unemployment rate, which was as low as 4.4 percent in March 2007,
currently stands at 10 percent.
Recently we have seen some pickup in economic activity, reflecting, in part, the
waning of some forces that had been restraining the economy during the preceding
several quarters. The collapse of final demand that accelerated in the latter part of 2008
left many firms with excessive inventories of unsold goods, which in turn led them to cut
production and employment aggressively. This phenomenon was especially evident in
the motor vehicle industry, where automakers, a number of whom were facing severe
financial pressures, temporarily suspended production at many plants. By the middle of
this year, however, inventories had been sufficiently reduced to encourage firms in a
wide range of industries to begin increasing output again, contributing to the recent
upturn in the nation’s gross domestic product (GDP).2
Although the working down of inventories has encouraged production, a
sustainable recovery requires renewed growth in final sales. It is encouraging that we
have begun to see some evidence of stronger demand for homes and consumer goods and
services. In the housing sector, sales of new and existing homes have moved up
2

The three-month diffusion index for manufacturing--a measure of the breadth of production changes
across industry categories--stood at 63.8 percent in September. See Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (2009), Statistical Release G.17, “Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization,” Table 6:
Diffusion Indexes of Industrial Production (November 17),
www.federalreserve.gov/releases/g17/Current/table6.txt.

-3appreciably over the course of this year, and prices have firmed a bit. Meanwhile, the
inventory of unsold new homes has been shrinking. Reflecting these developments,
homebuilders have somewhat increased the rate of new construction--a marked change
from the steep declines that have characterized the past few years.
Consumer spending also has been rising since midyear. Part of this increase
reflected a temporary surge in auto purchases that resulted from the “cash for clunkers”
program, but spending in categories other than motor vehicles has increased as well. In
the business sector, outlays for new equipment and software are showing tentative signs
of stabilizing, and improving economic conditions abroad have buoyed the demand for
U.S. exports.
Though we have begun to see some improvement in economic activity, we still
have some way to go before we can be assured that the recovery will be self-sustaining.
Also at issue is whether the recovery will be strong enough to create the large number of
jobs that will be needed to materially bring down the unemployment rate. Economic
forecasts are subject to great uncertainty, but my best guess at this point is that we will
continue to see modest economic growth next year--sufficient to bring down the
unemployment rate, but at a pace slower than we would like.
A number of factors support the view that the recovery will continue next year.
Importantly, financial conditions continue to improve: Corporations are having relatively
little difficulty raising funds in the bond and stock markets, stock prices and other asset
values have recovered significantly from their lows, and a variety of indicators suggest
that fears of systemic collapse have receded substantially. Monetary and fiscal policies

-4are supportive. And I have already mentioned what appear to be improving conditions in
housing, consumer expenditure, business investment, and global economic activity.
On the other hand, the economy confronts some formidable headwinds that seem
likely to keep the pace of expansion moderate. Despite the general improvement in
financial conditions, credit remains tight for many borrowers, particularly bankdependent borrowers such as households and small businesses. And the job market,
though no longer contracting at the pace we saw in 2008 and earlier this year, remains
weak. Household spending is unlikely to grow rapidly when people remain worried
about job security and have limited access to credit.
Inflation is affected by a number of crosscurrents. High rates of resource slack
are contributing to a slowing in underlying wage and price trends, and longer-run
inflation expectations are stable. Commodities prices have risen lately, likely reflecting
the pickup in global economic activity and the depreciation of the dollar. Although we
will continue to monitor inflation closely, on net it appears likely to remain subdued for
some time.
What Has the Federal Reserve Been Doing to Support the Economy and the
Financial System?
The discussion of where the economy is headed brings us to our second question:
What has the Federal Reserve been doing to support the economy and the financial
system?
The Federal Reserve has been, and still is, doing a great deal to foster financial
stability and to spur recovery in jobs and economic activity.3 Notably, we began the

3

See Ben S. Bernanke (2009), “Reflections on a Year of Crisis,” speech delivered at “Financial Stability
and Macroeconomic Policy,” a symposium sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, held in
Jackson Hole, Wyo., August 20-22, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20090821a.htm.

-5process of easing monetary policy in September 2007, shortly after the crisis began. By
mid-December 2008, our target rate was effectively as low as it could go--within a range
of 0 to 1/4 percent, compared with 5-1/4 percent before the crisis--and we have
maintained that very low rate for the past year.
Our efforts to support the economy have gone well beyond conventional
monetary policy, however. I have already alluded to the Federal Reserve’s close
cooperation with the Treasury, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and
other domestic and foreign authorities in a concerted and ultimately successful effort to
stabilize the global banking system, which verged on collapse following the extraordinary
events of September and October 2008. We subsequently took strong measures,
independently or in conjunction with other agencies, to help normalize key financial
institutions and credit markets disrupted by the crisis. Among these were the money
market mutual fund industry, in which large numbers of American households,
businesses, and municipalities make short-term investments; and the commercial paper
market, which many firms tap to finance their day-to-day operations. We also
established and subsequently expanded special arrangements with other central banks to
provide dollars to global funding markets, as we found that disruptions in dollar-based
markets abroad were spilling over to our own markets.
More recently, we have played an important part in helping to re-start the markets
for asset-backed securities that finance auto loans, credit card loans, small business loans,
student loans, loans to finance commercial real estate, and other types of credit. By
working to revive these markets, which allow banks to tap the broader securities markets
to finance their lending, we have helped banks make room on their balance sheets for

-6new credit to households and businesses. In addition, we have supported the overall
functioning of private credit markets and helped to lower interest rates on bonds,
mortgages, and other loans by purchasing unprecedented volumes of mortgage-related
securities and Treasury debt.
In all of these efforts, our objective has not been to support specific financial
institutions or markets for their own sake. Rather, recognizing that a healthy economy
requires well-functioning financial markets, we have moved always with the single aim
of promoting economic recovery and economic opportunity. In that respect, our means
and goals have been fully consistent with the traditional functions of a central bank and
with the mandate given to the Federal Reserve by the Congress to promote price stability
and maximum employment.
In addition to easing monetary policy and acting to stabilize financial markets, we
have worked in our role as a bank supervisor to encourage bank lending. In November
2008 we joined with other banking regulators to urge banks to continue lending to
creditworthy borrowers--to the benefit of both the economy and the banks--and we have
recently provided guidelines to banks for working constructively with troubled
commercial real estate loans.4 This spring, we led a coordinated, comprehensive
examination of 19 of the country’s largest banks, an exercise formally known as the
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program, or SCAP, but more informally as the “stress
test.” This assessment was designed to ensure that these banks, which collectively hold
4

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, and Office of Thrift Supervision (2008), “Interagency Statement on
Meeting the Needs of Creditworthy Borrowers,” joint press release, November 12,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20081112a.htm; and Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (2009), “Federal Reserve Adopts Policy Statement Supporting Prudent Commercial Real
Estate (CRE) Loan Workouts,” press release, October 30,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20091030a.htm.

-7about two-thirds of the assets of the banking system, would remain well capitalized and
able to lend to creditworthy borrowers even if economic conditions turned out to be even
worse than expected. The release of the assessment results in May provided sorely
needed clarity about the banks’ condition and marked a turning point in the restoration of
confidence in our banking system.5 In the months since then, and with the strong
encouragement of the federal banking supervisors, many of these largest institutions have
raised billions of dollars in new capital, improving their ability to withstand possible
future losses and to extend loans as demand for credit recovers. Meanwhile, we have
also continued our efforts to ensure fair treatment for the customers of financial firms.
During the past year and a half, we have comprehensively overhauled the regulations
protecting mortgage borrowers, credit card holders, and users of overdraft protection
plans, among others.
In navigating through the crisis, the Federal Reserve has been greatly aided by the
regional structure established by the Congress when it created the Federal Reserve in
1913. The more than 270 business people, bankers, nonprofit executives, academics, and
community, agricultural, and labor leaders who serve on the boards of the 12 Reserve
Banks and their 24 Branches provide valuable insights into current economic and
financial conditions that statistics alone cannot. Thus, the structure of the Federal
Reserve ensures that our policymaking is informed not just by a Washington perspective,
or a Wall Street perspective, but also a Main Street perspective. Indeed, our Reserve

5

See Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (2009), “Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC
Release Results of the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program,” press release, May 7,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20090507a.htm; and Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (2009), “Federal Reserve Board Makes Announcement Regarding the Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program (SCAP),” press release, November 9,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20091109a.htm.

-8Banks and Branches have deep roots in the nation’s communities and do much good
work there. They have, to give just a couple of examples, assisted organizations
specializing in foreclosure mitigation and worked with nonprofit groups to help stabilize
neighborhoods hit by high rates of foreclosure. They (as well as the Board) are also
much involved in financial and economic education, helping people to make better
financial decisions and to better understand how the economy works.
All told, the Federal Reserve’s actions--in combination with those of other
policymakers here and abroad--have helped restore financial stability and pull the
economy back from the brink. Because of our programs, auto buyers have obtained loans
they would not have otherwise obtained, college students are financing their educations
through credit they otherwise likely would not have received, and home buyers have
secured mortgages on more affordable and sustainable terms than they would have
otherwise. These improvements in credit conditions in turn are supporting a broader
economic recovery.
Will the Federal Reserve’s Actions Lead to Higher Inflation Down the Road?
The scope and scale of our actions, however, while necessary and helpful in my
view, have left some uneasy. In all, our asset purchases and lending have caused the
Federal Reserve’s balance sheet to more than double, from less than $900 billion before
the crisis began to about $2.2 trillion today. Unprecedented balance sheet expansion and
near-zero overnight interest rates raise our third frequently asked question: Will the
Federal Reserve’s actions to combat the crisis lead to higher inflation down the road?
The answer is no; the Federal Reserve is committed to keeping inflation low and
will be able to do so. In the near term, elevated unemployment and stable inflation

-9expectations should keep inflation subdued, and indeed, inflation could move lower from
here. However, as the recovery strengthens, the time will come when it is appropriate to
begin withdrawing the unprecedented monetary stimulus that is helping to support
economic activity. For that reason, we have been giving careful thought to our exit
strategy. We are confident that we have all the tools necessary to withdraw monetary
stimulus in a timely and effective way. 6
Indeed, our balance sheet is already beginning to adjust, because improving
financial conditions are leading to substantially reduced use of our lending facilities. The
balance sheet will also shrink over time as the mortgage-backed securities and other
assets we hold mature or are prepaid. However, even if our balance sheet stays large for
a while, we will be able to raise our target short-term interest rate--which is the rate at
which banks lend to each other overnight--and thus tighten financial conditions
appropriately.
Operationally, an important tool for adjusting the stance of monetary policy will
be the authority, granted to us by the Congress last year, to pay banks interest on balances
they hold at the Federal Reserve. When the time comes to raise short-term interest rates
and thereby tighten policy, we can do so by raising the rate that we offer banks on their
balances with us. Banks will be unwilling to make overnight loans to each other at a rate
lower than the rate that they can earn risk-free from the Fed, and so the interest rate we
pay on banks’ balances will tend to set a floor below our target overnight loan rate and
other short-term interest rates.
6

See Ben S. Bernanke (2009), “The Federal Reserve’s Balance Sheet: An Update,” speech delivered at the
Federal Reserve Board Conference on Key Developments in Monetary Policy, Washington, October 8,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20091008a.htm; and Ben S. Bernanke (2009), “The
Fed’s Exit Strategy,” Opinion, Wall Street Journal, July 21,
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203946904574300050657897992.html.

- 10 Additional upward pressure on short-term interest rates can be achieved by
measures to reduce the supply of funds that banks have available to lend to each other.
We have a number of tools to accomplish this. For example, through the use of a shortterm funding method known as reverse repurchase agreements, we can act directly to
reduce the quantity of reserves held by the banking system. By paying a slightly higher
rate of interest, we could induce banks to lock up their balances in longer-term accounts
with us, making those balances unavailable for lending in the overnight market. And, if
necessary, we always have the option of reducing the size of our balance sheet by selling
some of our securities holdings on the open market.
As always, the most difficult challenge for the Federal Open Market Committee
will not be devising the technical means of unwinding monetary stimulus. Rather, it will
be the challenge that faces central banks in every economic recovery, which is correctly
judging the best time to tighten policy. Because monetary policy affects the economy
with a lag, we will need to base our decision on our best forecast of how the economy
will develop. As I said a few moments ago, we currently expect inflation to remain
subdued for some time. It is also reassuring that longer-term inflation expectations
appear stable. Nevertheless, we will keep a close eye on inflation risks and will do
whatever is necessary to meet our mandate to foster both price stability and maximum
employment.
How Can We Avoid a Similar Crisis in the Future?
As we at the Federal Reserve and others work to build on the progress already
made toward securing a sustained economic recovery with price stability, we must also

- 11 continue to address the weaknesses that led to the current crisis. Thus, our final question
this afternoon is: How can we avoid a similar crisis in the future?7
Although the sources of the crisis were extraordinarily complex and numerous, a
fundamental cause was that many financial firms simply did not appreciate the risks they
were taking. Their risk-management systems were inadequate and their capital and
liquidity buffers insufficient. Unfortunately, neither the firms nor the regulators
identified and remedied many of the weaknesses soon enough. Thus, all financial
regulators, including the Federal Reserve, must undertake unsparing self-assessments. At
the Federal Reserve, we have extensively reviewed our performance and moved to
strengthen our oversight of banks. Working cooperatively with other agencies, we are
toughening our banking regulations to help constrain excessive risk-taking and enhance
the ability of banks to withstand financial stress. For example, we have been among the
leaders of international efforts, through organizations such as the Basel Committee on
Bank Supervision, to increase the quantities of capital and liquidity that banks must hold.
At home, we are implementing standards that require banking organizations to adopt
compensation policies that link pay to the institutions’ long-term performance and avoid
encouraging excessive risk-taking.
I mentioned the SCAP, otherwise known as the stress tests. We are applying the
lessons learned in that exercise to reorient our approach to the supervision of large,
interconnected banking organizations that are critical to the stability of the financial
system. In particular, we are taking a more “macroprudential” approach, one that goes
beyond supervisors’ traditional focus on the health of individual institutions and
7

See Ben S. Bernanke (2009), “Financial Regulation and Supervision after the Crisis: The Role of the
Federal Reserve,” speech delivered at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston 54th Economic Conference,
held in Chatham, Mass., October 23, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20091023a.htm.

- 12 scrutinizes the interrelationships among firms and markets to better anticipate sources of
financial contagion. To do that, we are expanding our use of the kind of simultaneous
and comparative cross-firm examinations that we used to such good effect in the SCAP.
The Federal Reserve’s ability to draw on a range of disciplines--using economists, market
experts, accountants, and lawyers, in addition to bank examiners--was essential to the
success of the SCAP, and a multidisciplinary approach will be a central feature of our
supervision in the future. For example, we are complementing our traditional onsite
examinations with enhanced off-site surveillance programs, under which
multidisciplinary teams will combine supervisory information, firm-specific data
analysis, and market-based indicators to identify problems that may affect one or more
banking institutions.
Although regulators can do a great deal on their own to improve financial
oversight, the Congress also must act to fix gaps and weaknesses in the structure of the
regulatory system and, in so doing, address the very serious problem posed by firms
perceived as “too big to fail.” No firm, by virtue of its size and complexity, should be
permitted to hold the financial system, the economy, or the American taxpayer hostage.
To eliminate that possibility, a number of steps are required.
First, all systemically important financial institutions, not only banks, should be
subject to strong and comprehensive supervision on a consolidated, or firmwide, basis.
Such institutions should be subject to tougher capital, liquidity, and risk-management
requirements than other firms--both to reduce their chance of failing and to remove their
incentive to grow simply in order to be perceived as too big to fail. Neither AIG, an
insurance company, nor Bear Stearns, an investment firm, was subject to strong

- 13 consolidated supervision. The Federal Reserve, as the regulator of bank holding
companies, already supervises many of the largest and most complex institutions in the
world. That experience, together with our broad knowledge of the financial markets,
makes us well suited to serve as the consolidated supervisor for systemically important
nonbank institutions as well. In addition, our involvement in supervision is critical for
ensuring that we have the necessary expertise, information, and authorities to carry out
our essential functions of promoting financial stability and making monetary policy.
Second, when a systemically important institution does approach failure,
government policymakers must have an option other than a bailout or a disorderly,
confidence-shattering bankruptcy. The Congress should create a new resolution regime,
analogous to the regime currently used by the FDIC for failing banks, that would permit
the government to wind down a troubled systemically important firm in a way that
protects financial stability but that also imposes losses on shareholders and creditors of
the failed firm, without costs to the taxpayer. Imposing losses on creditors of troubled,
systemically critical firms would help address the too-big-to-fail problem by restoring
market discipline and leveling the playing field for smaller firms, while minimizing the
disruptive effects of a failure on the financial system and the economy.
Third, our regulatory structure requires a better mechanism for monitoring and
addressing emerging risks to the financial system as a whole. Because of the size,
diversity, and complexity of our financial system, that task may exceed the capacity of
any individual agency. The Federal Reserve therefore supports the creation of a systemic
oversight council, made up of the principal financial regulators, to identify developments

- 14 that may pose systemic risks, recommend approaches for dealing with them, and
coordinate the responses of its member agencies.
Conclusion
In closing, I will again note that in the fall of last year, the United States, indeed
the world, confronted a financial crisis of a magnitude unseen for generations. Concerted
actions by the Federal Reserve and other policymakers here and abroad helped avoid the
worst outcomes. Nevertheless, the turmoil dealt a severe blow to our economy from
which we have only recently begun to recover. The improvement in financial conditions
this year and the resumption of growth over the summer offer the hope and expectation of
continued recovery in the new year. However, significant headwinds remain, including
tight credit conditions and a weak job market.
The Federal Reserve has been aggressive in its efforts to stabilize our financial
system and to support economic activity. At some point, however, we will need to
unwind our accommodative policies in order to avoid higher inflation in the future. I am
confident we have both the tools and the commitment to make that adjustment when it is
needed and in a manner consistent with our mandate to foster employment and price
stability.
In the meantime, financial firms must do a better job of managing the risks of
their business, regulators--the Federal Reserve included--must complete a thoroughgoing
overhaul of their approach to supervision, and the Congress should move forward in
making needed changes to our system of financial regulation to avoid a similar crisis in
the future. In particular, we must solve the problem of “too big to fail.”

- 15 In sum, we have come a long way from the darkest period of the crisis, but we
have some distance yet to go. In the midst of some of the toughest days, in October
2008, I said in a speech that I was confident that the American economy, with its great
intrinsic vitality, would emerge from that period with renewed vigor.8 I remain equally
confident today.

88

See Ben S. Bernanke (2008), “Stabilizing the Financial Markets and the Economy,” speech delivered at
the Economic Club of New York, New York, N.Y., October 15,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20081015a.htm.