Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Janet Yellen says the central bank may
keep its key short-term interest rate at a record low even after
unemployment falls close to a more normal level.Vintage tubs
The Fed has said it would hold its benchmark rate near zero as long
as unemployment is above 6.5 percent and long-run inflation forecasts
are below 2.5 percent. The unemployment rate is currently 7.9 percent.
In a speech Monday to the AFL-CIO, Yellen said those are "thresholds
for possible action, not triggers that will necessarily prompt an
immediate increase."Antique tubs
Her comments echoed remarks Chairman Ben Bernanke made in December
after the Fed announced it would change its forward guidance for
short-term rate increases. At a news conference after the Fed's December
meeting, Bernanke said the Fed might decide to keep stimulating the
economy even after unemployment falls below 6.5 percent.
Yellen has been a close Bernanke ally. She has consistently voted to
support his initiatives to boost the economy. Those include the latest
change in guidance for short-term rates, as well as bond purchases that
have helped push long-term rates lower. Both are designed to encourage
more borrowing and spending, which boosts economic growth.Clawfoot tubs
Yellen is considered a top prospect to succeed Bernanke as chairman,
should he leave when his current term ends on Jan. 31, 2014.Cast iron tubs
Analysts said Yellen's comments are a signal that Fed remains
committed to aggressive stimulus measures to boost growth and lower
unemployment.
"Yellen does not sound ready to slow asset purchases, far less contemplate tightening policy, any time soon," Dana Saporta, Vintage faucetsdirector of U.S. economics at Credit Suisse, said in a research note.
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