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Federal Reserve Has Few Arrows Left in Its Quiver

By Peter Morici Created: July 29, 2012 Last Updated: July 30, 2012
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A construction worker installs a window in a new home at the Arbor Rose housing development on July 18, in San Mateo, California. Housing starts have eased signaling a weakening in the economy. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

A construction worker installs a window in a new home at the Arbor Rose housing development on July 18, in San Mateo, California. Housing starts have eased signaling a weakening in the economy. (Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

The Federal Reserve is moving closer to announcing additional steps to stimulate the economy, but it can’t do much to curb the threat of another recession.

The economy is growing at less than 2 percent. Jobs creation in April, May and June was lower than a snake’s belly, averaging 75,000 a month or less than is necessary to keep up with population growth.

Many manufacturers and service businesses report falling prices.

Unemployment holds steady at 8.2 percent only because so many folks have quit looking for work and are no longer counted in the official tally of joblessness.

Worker productivity is not advancing, indicating businesses have more employees than needed to meet demand, and layoffs will follow if sales don’t pick up. Jobless claims are up again, and would likely be worse but for the fact that many people have exhausted their eligibility.

Deteriorating conditions in Europe and a weaker euro and Chinese yuan indicate U.S. exporters and import-competing businesses will face a tough environment through the balance of the year.

Retail sales fell in April, May and June, as consumers became increasingly pessimistic that President Obama’s economic policies will fix the economy. And they are simply not convinced Governor Romney offers sufficiently effective alternatives and the personal qualities to be President.

Simply, Americans—even those with secure jobs—are hunkering down for a long siege. They are disgusted and frightened by corporate leaders and bankers who take outsized salaries while they mine the nation’s assets to invest abroad and gamble with government-insured money. All the while, they place the prosperity of ordinary Americans at grave risk to serve their avarice.

In manufacturing, the bright star of the recovery, new orders and shipments are growing haltingly. Many manufacturers and service businesses report falling prices. Prices being slashed to sustain sales is an ominous indicator of more layoffs and recession.

The Federal Reserve has already pulled all the levers that might make a difference. Short-term interest rates—such as the overnight bank borrowing rate and one-month and one- year Treasury Bill rates—are already close to zero.

When the Federal Reserve Open Market Committee met on June 19 and 20 more bond purchases to push down long-term Treasury and mortgage rates were already on the table. However, over the last several months, investors have moved cash from risky European government and corporate securities to U.S. bonds. The 30-year Treasury and mortgage rates are now near record lows, preempting the effectiveness of any additional Fed measures.

A statement that the Fed intends to keep short rates near zero beyond 2014 would have little impact on investor and home buyer psychology—already, few expect the Fed to push up interest rates in the foreseeable future.

Central bank policy can help dampen inflation when the economy overheats and lift borrowing and home sales a bit when it falters, but it can’t instigate faster growth when the President and Congress fail to address structural problems.

Demand for U.S. products is burdened by huge trade deficits on oil and consumer goods with China. Both result from government inaction.

President Obama has significantly curtailed production of oil offshore and in Alaska, and refuses calls from economists across the ideological spectrum to force China to stop manipulating its currency. Together, reversing those actions would create at least 5 million jobs.

Lacking better policies from the Oval Office, there is little the Federal Reserve can do.

Peter Morici is an economist and professor at the Smith School of Business, University of Maryland, and widely published columnist.

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  • PeterPalms

    You state the facts Peter Morici.The Fed can’t instigate employment.Interest rates cease to be a factor at this low level.

  • PeterPalms

    I agree with you The greatest contribution of the Fed would be to request Congress to rescind the Act odf 1913 and abolish the fed. it would end inflation and stop stop prices from falling due to drop in the value of fiat money and stop inflation.

  • PeterPalms

    Europe cannot be saved because all of the Central banks in the world except Cuba, North Korea and Iran are owned by the Rothschild. They will all collapse together. Gross Domestic product will continue to drop due to Industrialization replacing the labor force and export of jobs to other countries with lower wage rate as well as a drop in consumption caused by children moving back in with parents to eliminate mortgages on overvalued homes.Inflation by the Fed through Quantitative easing would further aggravate inflation.It has gone to far to stop the collapse nor is there any intention to do so.
    Too much wealth has been transferred. 7% of the population of the world now owns 57% of the world
    They are not going to give it back. The only thing that will work if they do not give it back will be world government by a New World Order consisting of totalitarianism. Our only option left is if Congress rescinds the charter of the Fed.Not enough people are waking up as yet to force this about.


   

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