(Photo credit: CityGypsy11) |
Taking a page from the academic paper presented to the central bankers' conference in Jackson Hole, Wyoming in late August by Michael Woodford, the U.S. central bank on Thursday said it would continue to buy financial assets until there is a "substantial" improvement in the labor market. The Fed also said it would keep interest rates very low well after the economic recovery strengthens.
At a press conference in Washington D.C., Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke cited Woodford's research and called him a friend as he explained the conditions attached to the Fed's third round of bond buying, known as quantitative easing, or QE3.
Woodford, a Columbia University professor and one of the foremost thinkers on how economies can escape from the threat of deflation, welcomed the Fed's new approach in an interview with Reuters and predicted it would help stabilize financial markets no matter what news - good or bad - is on the horizon. ... Continue to read.
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