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Bernanke: "I Had To Hold My Nose" Over Bailouts

JEANNINE AVERSA   07/26/09 11:34 PM ET   AP

Ben Bernanke

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Sunday that he had to "hold my nose" over last year's taxpayer-financed bailouts of big financial companies but argued that the action had to be taken to avoid a major meltdown of the U.S. financial system and the broader economy.

Bernanke's comments came during a town-hall style meeting in Kansas City, Mo., where he was peppered with several questions about government decisions last year to rescue so-called "too big to fail companies" like insurance giant American International Group, whose collapse would have wreaked havoc on the global economy.

A small-business owner complained to Bernanke that such actions were "hard to swallow," saying he felt like small businesses – also struggling to survive the recession and all the financial fallout – were being shortchanged.

"Nothing made me more frustrated, more angry, than having to intervene" when companies were "taking wild bets," Bernanke said. But not acting would have had grave consequences for the economy, he added.

"I was not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the second Great Depression," he said. "I had to hold my nose. ... I'm as disgusted as you are. ... I absolutely understand your frustration."

Public television's Jim Lehrer moderated the one-hour town hall meeting. It will air this week in three installments on PBS' "The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer."

At the height of the financial crisis last fall, Bernanke recalled spending nights on the sofa in his office. It was a "perfect storm," he said, where housing, credit and financial problems converged into a major crisis the likes of which haven't been seen since the 1930s. To deal with the crisis, Bernanke said he sometimes had to do things "outside the box."

The financial crisis underscores the need for Congress to enact legislation that will create a government mechanism for safely unwinding big financial companies, along the lines of the process used by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. to handle failing banks, Bernanke said.

When asked about the Fed's diligence in protecting consumers, Bernanke acknowledged that "we were late in addressing the subprime lending problem," referring to the risky mortgages and dubious lending practices that powered the housing boom and contributed to its crash. "We have to take some heat for that."

Still, Bernanke made the case – as he did last week on Capitol Hill – that consumer protection oversight should stay with the Fed. An Obama administration proposal would create a new consumer protection agency overseeing mortgage, credit cards and other financial products, stripping the Fed of some of its duties. Of setting up such a new agency, Bernanke seemed to soften his earlier stance, saying, "I'm neither opposed to it or in favor or it."

When Lehrer said some people think the Fed is the fourth branch of the government, Bernanke responded, "That's a tremendous exaggeration." He said the Fed's independence from political interference in setting interest rates to influence economic activity is crucial. "You get much better results" for the economy when this is the case, he said. "We're very, very sensitive to this issue."

Asked about President Obama's $787 billion stimulus package of tax cuts and increased government spending, Bernanke said most of the money will flow in 2010 so "it might be a little bit early" to judge its effectiveness. Although big budget deficits couldn't be avoided this year and next, given government efforts to help the economy, Bernanke urged Congress to develop a plan now to bring back "fiscal sanity."

On the economy, Bernanke repeated the Fed's forecast that unemployment will probably top 10 percent this year, even as the economy starts growing again in the second half of 2009. The jobless rate is now at a 26-year high of 9.5 percent. In a "few years" the economy will be back on track and "growing strongly again," Bernanke said. "It will take some patience."

The Fed, he said, "has been putting the pedal to the metal" to turn the economy around.

Inflation, meanwhile, will remain "quite low" for the next couple of years, Bernanke said. Given the outlook for a slow recovery, companies won't be in a position to jack up rates or feel inclined to beef up workers' wages, he said.

Bernanke's appearance on the program is part of a broader campaign, unusual for a Fed chairman, to reach out to ordinary Americans. In March, Bernanke granted a rare TV interview, appearing on CBS' "60 Minutes."

"I'm answerable to the American people," Bernanke told the audience at the town hall meeting.

His efforts to explain the Fed's actions to get the economy and financial markets back on firm footing comes as the clock ticks on Bernanke's term as Fed chief. His term expires early next year, and President Barack Obama has not said whether he will be reappointed.

The Fed chief, who took the helm on February 2006, has been on the front lines of efforts to battle the financial crisis and end the recession, the longest since World War II.

His aggressive and unconventional actions – including supporting the bailout of AIG to the tune of more than $180 billion – have been credited with averting a financial catastrophe last year but also have touched off anger from the public and lawmakers on Capitol Hill about helping financial companies that made reckless gambles.

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WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Sunday that he had to "hold my nose" over last year's taxpayer-financed bailouts of big financial companies but argued that the action had...
WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Sunday that he had to "hold my nose" over last year's taxpayer-financed bailouts of big financial companies but argued that the action had...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BabaLou7
Insignificant, yet eternal God Fractal
04:03 PM on 07/27/2009
How come after every Republican administra­tion leaves, resulting in the rape of America's resources, wealth and citizens, we have to "hold our noses"? Why are no media taking a look at this pattern and addressing it correctly?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BannedNBoston
Is hemp legal yet?
02:31 PM on 07/27/2009
Bernake cant stop the commercial real estate crash coming.
in 3 months The dollar is going down and food and gas is going up.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BradSmith
02:48 PM on 07/27/2009
How about we replace Bernanke with Peter Shiff he actually predicted this mess correctly. Of course he would try and shut down the Fed. Now wouldn't that be a shame?
05:52 PM on 07/27/2009
Don't forget hyperinfla­tion. You guys have been talking about that since day 1 of quantitati­ve easement. You aren't backing off of that, are you?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
02:20 PM on 07/27/2009
Town Hall Meeting? Trying to do an Obama-styl­e campaign tour to stop all the public support building for auditing the Federal Reserve? Give me a break. Audit the Federal Reserve. These people have been looting the American people without accountabi­lity for way too long. It seems no one is accountabl­e for anything anymore as long as they are up on Capitol Hill or connected to a presidenti­al administra­tion. It's time for these folks to face the same kind of scrutiny and answer to the rule of law just like the rest of The People of the US. It seems there are laws for the rich and powerful and laws for everyone else. While it is impossible to stop this outrageous double standard for private American citizens, The People can certainly say, "Enough," when it comes to those who work for our federal government­. They are after all, The People's employees.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BradSmith
02:52 PM on 07/27/2009
Yep, you are not a convicted criminal until you are found guilty. First we audit then we convict and then we end, the Fed.
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Artos
Down with Tyrants
12:56 PM on 07/27/2009
"I was not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the second Great Depression­," he said. "I had to hold my nose. ... I'm as disgusted as you are. ... I absolutely understand your frustratio­n."

So in essence the decisions he made were all about him, his ego and reputation­. I seriously doubt he understand our frustratio­n.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
spinns17
TEAMSTER
12:44 PM on 07/27/2009
we americans must hold these crooks accountabl­e for there crimes.pro­fits over the good of amecica.wh­ere are all those good american repugs .
12:36 PM on 07/27/2009
The Fed never thought it've toured
For mobs it had always ignored;
But now Ben Bernanke
And not blue-eyed Frankie
Is famous as Chair of the Bored.

News Short & Sweet by JFD8
http://twi­tter.com/J­FD8
12:04 PM on 07/27/2009
Ben Bernanke
on Sunday said he engineered the central bank's controvers­ial actions over the past year because "I was not going to be the Federal Reserve chairman who presided over the second Great Depression­."

Bush
"So I analyzed that and decided I didn't want to be the president during a depression greater than the Great Depression­, or the beginning of a depression greater than the Great Depression­." --George W. Bush, Washington D.C., Dec. 18, 2008

That is so weird !! I didn't want to be part of the last 8 years of Bush's screw ups either !! LMAO
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BradSmith
11:51 AM on 07/27/2009
It should be interestin­g to see what the FED does when the rest of the world dumps the dollar as the reserve currency. China and Russia are already talking about it.

The opposition party in Japan has said that if they win and it looks like they will, that they will no longer buy US treasury debt unless the US pays them back in pro-rated Yen. So the FED won't be able to inflate itself out of debt. I have a feeling if they do this China will follow.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tom95134
11:35 AM on 07/27/2009
I suppose you would have to hold your nose after the way you were following the Bush policies of non-interf­erence in Wall Street's "business as usual" so closely. Did you also have to wipe it off using toilet tissue?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jalowe1957
Poisonous epitaphs dished out periodically.
11:15 AM on 07/27/2009
If you're gonna hold your nose Benny, try using a clothespin instead.
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Kassandra
Idiot savant artistic genius
11:14 AM on 07/27/2009
Oh! Please! Have you noticed, Mister Bernanke that the "economy is still "melting down"?????­?
iridium53
Semper Fi
11:11 AM on 07/27/2009
The AVERAGE pay per employee at Goldman Sachs is $700,000 a year.
For a company that lost money.
That is obscene.

It was and is enabled by Bernanke, Obama, Summers and Geithner - with American Taxpayer money.

What did the American Taxpayer get for it? A bill.

The facts are very clear.
Obama, Bernanke, et. al., are intent on creating and maintainin­g a government by those who seek chiefly status and personal gain at the expense of the governed.

Soon, the Obama administra­tion will start to funnel money to the healthcare companies that already take a third of the money out of the system to no benefit. Requiring everyone to pay their monster fees and obscene salaries of HCA and Cigna executives (who paid fines for fraud, but, strangely, didn't go to jail).
10:56 AM on 07/27/2009
Do you think there might have been a lot of peoples in the Bush administra­tion holdin' their noses?
10:28 AM on 07/27/2009
"Nothing made me more frustrated­, more angry, than having to intervene" when companies were "taking wild bets," Bernanke said.

How about that they continue to make wild bets with the backed guarantee of the FED, aka. tax payer money. That doesn't make you just a little more upset?
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stunsitfel
Liberale sind verlorene Schafe
09:47 AM on 07/27/2009
Helicopter Ben is at it again.

But make no mistake, in order to mop up all the excess liquidity, the Fed will need to raise interest rates substantia­lly to attract buyers for all the bonds that the Treasury must sell. Fed officials know that our economy is completely dependent on cheap money and limitless government credit, and can’t tolerate the loss of either. Of course, the longer the monetary spigot remains open, the more addicted to low rates we get, and the harder it will be to kick the habit. If the Fed could not remove the punch bowl during the years before the bust, how will they do so while the economy is far weaker? Even if they do start the process, the minute the “recovery” seems in jeopardy, look for the Fed to turn the showers back on.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
BradSmith
11:41 AM on 07/27/2009
It's a catch 22. they must and will raise interest rates, however it will further slow down or just plain stop the economy. what they are hoping for is a break in the weather so to speak but it's still way to cloundy and it looks like a storm is on it's way.