Business | Economy
Policymaker calls for more rate cuts to cushion pain of slowdown
The US economy could be slipping into recession and the Federal Reserve must cushion the pain, a top Fed policymaker said in remarks supporting hopes for more interest rate cuts.
Chattanooga: The US economy could be slipping into recession and the Federal Reserve must cushion the pain, a top Fed policymaker said in remarks supporting hopes for more interest rate cuts.
Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Fed, was one of six US central bankers speaking on Thursday after government data confirmed anemic growth in the fourth quarter, which analysts say has since slowed further.
"It's clear the economy is in a slowdown that resembles past periods that were the leading edge of a recession," Lockhart told a Rotary Club meeting in Chattanooga, Tennessee.
Objective
"I believe that an important policy objective at this juncture is to ensure that this slowdown is short and shallow."
Meanwhile, Cleveland Fed Bank President Sandra Pianalto said a mortgage crisis that is pulling down housing prices is casting a pall over consumer spending and is "very detrimental to our economy."
Related Links
Much of her address in Dayton, Ohio, dealt with the Fed's effort to put new policies in place to try to mitigate the damage from the ongoing credit crisis to a vulnerable economy.
Pianalto is a voting member of US central bank's policy-setting Federal Open Market committee this year, but Lockhart is not. The Fed's regional bank presidents get voting slots on a rotating basis.
Gary Stern, president of the Minneapolis Fed and a voting member this year, also voiced concern over slow growth.
Stern and Pianalto both voted for the Fed's last rate cut. But two other regional Fed presidents - Dallas Fed chief Richard Fisher and Philadelphia's Charles Plosser - voted against such a large move.
More from Economy
More from Business
Business Editor's choice
-
‘Wrong Way' Krugman
The source of our economic malfunction lies with government-mandated bank regulations
-
Greek exit could make Eurozone stronger
Departure will show limits of bailouts and allow remaining members to act much more like a unit
-
UAE upholds values of free trade
Recently released statistics confirm an established fact, namely that of the UAE embracing the free trade principle in general and imports in particular

