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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Johannes Pilch who wrote (538491)2/11/2004 11:11:19 AM
From: Hope Praytochange  Respond to of 769667
 
keyinvest.ibb.ubs.com

Greenspan-US economy headed for vigorous growth

WASHINGTON, Feb 11 (Reuters) - Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan said on Wednesday the U.S. economy has turned
the corner to vigorous growth but that policy-makers can be
patient about interest-rate rises, though not forever.
"Last year appears to have marked a transition from an
extended period of subpar economic performance to one of more
vigorous expansion," Greenspan said in testimony prepared for
delivery to the House of Representatives Financial Services
Committee. "Looking forward, the odds of sustained robust
growth are good, although as always, risks remain."
The Fed chief warned of both potential long-term and
short-term risks from failing to get huge government deficits
under control. He also said "chronic concern" about a possible
spike in energy prices was another economic danger, and that
for Fed policy-makers, a continuing worry was that their policy
could become "improperly calibrated" to economic developments.
Greenspan said record federal budget deficits could create
problems "in the relatively near term" unless a convincing plan
for ratcheting them down was put in place. "Should investors
become significantly more doubtful that the Congress will take
the necessary fiscal measures, an appreciable backup in
long-term interest rates is possible," he said.
He said inflation appeared to be "in a range consistent
with price stability," which he called notable in light of the
dollar's decline against other currencies.
The Fed chief said foreign companies so far have been
willing to absorb the hit to their profits from a falling
dollar by hedging on currency markets. But he cautioned:
"Although hedging may delay the adjustment, it cannot eliminate
the consequences of exchange rate change."
Though the Bush administration claims it has a plan for
cutting this fiscal year's projected $521 billion deficit in
half by 2009, Greenspan suggested no one yet has presented a
convincing roadmap for lowering deficits.
"Although some stirrings in recent weeks in the Congress
and elsewhere have been directed at actions that would lower
forthcoming deficits, to date no effective constituency has
offered programs to balance the budget," he said.
((Reporting by Glenn Somerville and Tim Ahmann; Reuters
messaging: glenn.somerville@reuters.com; Tel: 1-202-898-8377))