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NY Fed Warns of Potential Deficit Fallout
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A ballooning budget deficit
and low savings rate pose risks to the U.S. economy and the financial
system, New York Federal Reserve (news - web sites) President
Timothy Geithner said on Thursday.
"The current deterioration in the U.S. fiscal position and
the acute decline in the net national savings rate represent risks
to the financial system and the economy as a whole," Geithner
told the New York Banker's Association.
Geithner said such looming risks were made all the more worrying
by the size of the U.S. current account deficit and the unprecedented
scale of financing needed to fund it.
The central banker urged the United States to strengthen risk
management in an increasingly complex financial environment to
guard against any eventualities.
He also noted that U.S. inflation was very low and the outlook
was for only very modest prices rises ahead, but offered little
in the way of hints on monetary policy in his first major speech
since becoming NY Fed President.
GREENSPAN ON FARMS
Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan (news - web sites) also refrained
from using any language that might suggest the future direction
of interest rates.
In a separate speech on Thursday, Greenspan said open global markets
are needed to ensure that consumers worldwide enjoy the benefits
of rapid gains in agricultural productivity.
Greenspan noted advances in farm productivity had brought wrenching
changes over the years in the U.S. economy, as workers first migrated
to manufacturing and more recently into service industries.
But he told the conference, sponsored by the Kansas City Federal
Reserve Bank and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development, that such "dislocations" were a worthwhile
price to pay for the increases in living standards productivity
brings.
Financial markets are awaiting speeches from Fed Board Governor
Donald Kohn and St Louis Fed President William Poole for any clues
regarding the timing of an eventual interest rate hike from the
central bank.
On Wednesday, two Federal Reserve officials warned investors that
loose monetary policy conditions will not last forever, particularly
in light of robust U.S. economic growth.
Job creation has been the missing component in the U.S. economic
recovery, and until it picks up in breadth and speed, the Fed
has suggested, borrowing costs are likely to remain at 1 percent,
their lowest level in 46 years.
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