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For release on delivery
10:00 a.m. EST
February 29, 2012

Statement by
Ben S. Bernanke
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Committee on Financial Services
U.S. House of Representatives
February 29, 2012

Chairman Bachus, Ranking Member Frank, and other members of the Committee, I am
pleased to present the Federal Reserve’s semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress. I
will begin with a discussion of current economic conditions and the outlook and then turn to
monetary policy.
The Economic Outlook
The recovery of the U.S. economy continues, but the pace of expansion has been uneven
and modest by historical standards. After minimal gains in the first half of last year, real gross
domestic product (GDP) increased at a 2-1/4 percent annual rate in the second half.1 The limited
information available for 2012 is consistent with growth proceeding, in coming quarters, at a
pace close to or somewhat above the pace that was registered during the second half of last year.
We have seen some positive developments in the labor market. Private payroll
employment has increased by 165,000 jobs per month on average since the middle of last year,
and nearly 260,000 new private-sector jobs were added in January. The job gains in recent
months have been relatively widespread across industries. In the public sector, by contrast,
layoffs by state and local governments have continued. The unemployment rate hovered around
9 percent for much of last year but has moved down appreciably since September, reaching 8.3
percent in January. New claims for unemployment insurance benefits have also moderated.
The decline in the unemployment rate over the past year has been somewhat more rapid
than might have been expected, given that the economy appears to have been growing during
that time frame at or below its longer-term trend; continued improvement in the job market is
likely to require stronger growth in final demand and production. Notwithstanding the better
recent data, the job market remains far from normal: The unemployment rate remains elevated,
1

Data for the fourth quarter of 2011 from the national income and product accounts reflect the advance estimate
released on January 27, 2012.

-2long-term unemployment is still near record levels, and the number of persons working part time
for economic reasons is very high.2
Household spending advanced moderately in the second half of last year, boosted by a
fourth-quarter surge in motor vehicle purchases that was facilitated by an easing of constraints on
supply related to the earthquake in Japan. However, the fundamentals that support spending
continue to be weak: Real household income and wealth were flat in 2011, and access to credit
remained restricted for many potential borrowers. Consumer sentiment, which dropped sharply
last summer, has since rebounded but remains relatively low.
In the housing sector, affordability has increased dramatically as a result of the decline in
house prices and historically low interest rates on conventional mortgages. Unfortunately, many
potential buyers lack the down payment and credit history required to qualify for loans; others
are reluctant to buy a house now because of concerns about their income, employment prospects,
and the future path of home prices. On the supply side of the market, about 30 percent of recent
home sales have consisted of foreclosed or distressed properties, and home vacancy rates remain
high, putting downward pressure on house prices. More-positive signs include a pickup in
construction in the multifamily sector and recent increases in homebuilder sentiment.
Manufacturing production has increased 15 percent since the trough of the recession and
has posted solid gains since the middle of last year, supported by the recovery in motor vehicle
supply chains and ongoing increases in business investment and exports. Real business spending
for equipment and software rose at an annual rate of about 12 percent over the second half of
2011, a bit faster than in the first half of the year. But real export growth, while remaining solid,

2

In January, 5-1/2 million persons among those counted as unemployed--about 43 percent of the total--had been out
of work for more than six months, and 8-1/4 million persons were working part time for economic reasons.

-3slowed somewhat over the same period as foreign economic activity decelerated, particularly in
Europe.
The members of the Board and the presidents of the Federal Reserve Banks recently
projected that economic activity in 2012 will expand at or somewhat above the pace registered in
the second half of last year. Specifically, their projections for growth in real GDP this year,
provided in conjunction with the January meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee
(FOMC), have a central tendency of 2.2 to 2.7 percent.3 These forecasts were considerably
lower than the projections they made last June.4 A number of factors have played a role in this
reassessment. First, the annual revisions to the national income and product accounts released
last summer indicated that the recovery had been somewhat slower than previously estimated. In
addition, fiscal and financial strains in Europe have weighed on financial conditions and global
economic growth, and problems in U.S. housing and mortgage markets have continued to hold
down not only construction and related industries, but also household wealth and confidence.
Looking beyond 2012, FOMC participants expect that economic activity will pick up gradually
as these headwinds fade, supported by a continuation of the highly accommodative stance for
monetary policy.
With output growth in 2012 projected to remain close to its longer-run trend, participants
did not anticipate further substantial declines in the unemployment rate over the course of this
year. Looking beyond this year, FOMC participants expect the unemployment rate to continue
3

See table 1, “Economic Projections of Federal Reserve Board Members and Federal Reserve Bank Presidents,
January 2012,” of the Summary of Economic Projections available at Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (2012), “Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open Market Committee Release Economic Projections from
the January 24-25 FOMC Meeting,” press release, January 25,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/monetary/20120125b.htm; also available in Part 4 of the February 2012
Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.
4
Ben S. Bernanke (2011), “Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress,” statement before the Committee
on Financial Services, U.S. House of Representatives, July 13,
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/testimony/bernanke20110713a.htm.

-4to edge down only slowly toward levels consistent with the Committee’s statutory mandate. In
light of the somewhat different signals received recently from the labor market than from
indicators of final demand and production, however, it will be especially important to evaluate
incoming information to assess the underlying pace of economic recovery.
At our January meeting, participants agreed that strains in global financial markets posed
significant downside risks to the economic outlook. Investors’ concerns about fiscal deficits and
the levels of government debt in a number of European countries have led to substantial
increases in sovereign borrowing costs, stresses in the European banking system, and associated
reductions in the availability of credit and economic activity in the euro area. To help prevent
strains in Europe from spilling over to the U.S. economy, the Federal Reserve in November
agreed to extend and to modify the terms of its swap lines with other major central banks, and it
continues to monitor the European exposures of U.S. financial institutions.
A number of constructive policy actions have been taken of late in Europe, including the
European Central Bank’s program to extend three-year collateralized loans to European financial
institutions. Most recently, European policymakers agreed on a new package of measures for
Greece, which combines additional official-sector loans with a sizable reduction of Greek debt
held by the private sector. However, critical fiscal and financial challenges remain for the euro
zone, the resolution of which will require concerted action on the part of European authorities.
Further steps will also be required to boost growth and competitiveness in a number of countries.
We are in frequent contact with our counterparts in Europe and will continue to follow the
situation closely.

-5As I discussed in my July testimony, inflation picked up during the early part of 2011.5
A surge in the prices of oil and other commodities, along with supply disruptions associated with
the disaster in Japan that put upward pressure on motor vehicle prices, pushed overall inflation to
an annual rate of more than 3 percent over the first half of last year.6 As we had expected,
however, these factors proved transitory, and inflation moderated to an annual rate of
1-1/2 percent during the second half of the year--close to its average pace in the preceding two
years. In the projections made in January, the Committee anticipated that, over coming quarters,
inflation will run at or below the 2 percent level we judge most consistent with our statutory
mandate. Specifically, the central tendency of participants’ forecasts for inflation in 2012 ranged
from 1.4 to 1.8 percent, about unchanged from the projections made last June.7 Looking farther
ahead, participants expected the subdued level of inflation to persist beyond this year. Since
these projections were made, gasoline prices have moved up, primarily reflecting higher global
oil prices--a development that is likely to push up inflation temporarily while reducing
consumers’ purchasing power. We will continue to monitor energy markets carefully. Longerterm inflation expectations, as measured by surveys and financial market indicators, appear
consistent with the view that inflation will remain subdued.
Monetary Policy
Against this backdrop of restrained growth, persistent downside risks to the outlook for
real activity, and moderating inflation, the Committee took several steps to provide additional
monetary accommodation during the second half of 2011 and early 2012. These steps included

5

Bernanke, “Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress” (see note 4).
Inflation is measured using the price index for personal consumption expenditures.
7
See table 1 available at Board of Governors, “Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open Market Committee Release
Economic Projections” (see note 3).
6

-6changes to the forward rate guidance included in the Committee’s post-meeting statements and
adjustments to the Federal Reserve’s holdings of Treasury and agency securities.
The target range for the federal funds rate remains at 0 to 1/4 percent, and the forward
guidance language in the FOMC policy statement provides an indication of how long the
Committee expects that target range to be appropriate. In August, the Committee clarified the
forward guidance language, noting that economic conditions--including low rates of resource
utilization and a subdued outlook for inflation over the medium run--were likely to warrant
exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through the middle of 2013. By
providing a longer time horizon than had previously been expected by the public, the statement
tended to put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates. At the January 2012 FOMC
meeting, the Committee amended the forward guidance further, extending the horizon over
which it expects economic conditions to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds
rate to at least through late 2014.
In addition to the adjustments made to the forward guidance, the Committee modified its
policies regarding the Federal Reserve’s holdings of securities. In September, the Committee put
in place a maturity extension program that combines purchases of longer-term Treasury
securities with sales of shorter-term Treasury securities. The objective of this program is to
lengthen the average maturity of our securities holdings without generating a significant change
in the size of our balance sheet. Removing longer-term securities from the market should put
downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help make financial market conditions more
supportive of economic growth than they otherwise would have been. To help support
conditions in mortgage markets, the Committee also decided at its September meeting to reinvest
principal received from its holdings of agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities

-7(MBS) in agency MBS, rather than continuing to reinvest those proceeds in longer-term Treasury
securities as had been the practice since August 2010. The Committee reviews the size and
composition of its securities holdings regularly and is prepared to adjust those holdings as
appropriate to promote a stronger economic recovery in the context of price stability.
Before concluding, I would like to say a few words about the statement of longer-run
goals and policy strategy that the FOMC issued at the conclusion of its January meeting. The
statement reaffirms our commitment to our statutory objectives, given to us by the Congress, of
price stability and maximum employment. Its purpose is to provide additional transparency and
increase the effectiveness of monetary policy. The statement does not imply a change in how the
Committee conducts policy.
Transparency is enhanced by providing greater specificity about our objectives. Because
the inflation rate over the longer run is determined primarily by monetary policy, it is feasible
and appropriate for the Committee to set a numerical goal for that key variable. The FOMC
judges that an inflation rate of 2 percent, as measured by the annual change in the price index for
personal consumption expenditures, is most consistent over the longer run with its statutory
mandate. While maximum employment stands on an equal footing with price stability as an
objective of monetary policy, the maximum level of employment in an economy is largely
determined by nonmonetary factors that affect the structure and dynamics of the labor market; it
is therefore not feasible for any central bank to specify a fixed goal for the longer-run level of
employment. However, the Committee can estimate the level of maximum employment and use
that estimate to inform policy decisions. In our most recent projections in January, for example,
FOMC participants’ estimates of the longer-run, normal rate of unemployment had a central

-8tendency of 5.2 to 6.0 percent.8 As I noted a moment ago, the level of maximum employment in
an economy is subject to change; for instance, it can be affected by shifts in the structure of the
economy and by a range of economic policies. If at some stage the Committee estimated that the
maximum level of employment had increased, for example, we would adjust monetary policy
accordingly.
The dual objectives of price stability and maximum employment are generally
complementary. Indeed, at present, with the unemployment rate elevated and the inflation
outlook subdued, the Committee judges that sustaining a highly accommodative stance for
monetary policy is consistent with promoting both objectives. However, in cases where these
objectives are not complementary, the Committee follows a balanced approach in promoting
them, taking into account the magnitudes of the deviations of inflation and employment from
levels judged to be consistent with the dual mandate, as well as the potentially different time
horizons over which employment and inflation are projected to return to such levels.
Thank you. I would be pleased to take your questions.

8

See table 1 available at Board of Governors, “Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open Market Committee Release
Economic Projections” (see note 3).