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Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke may find it harder to establish an inflation target now that Democrats have control of Congress.
Democrats prefer that the Fed focus on promoting growth as well as containing inflation. Some legislators advocate that the Fed adopt a target for employment as well as prices -- anathema to Bernanke and others at the central bank.
The Democrats will give Bernanke a tougher time than the Republicans on inflation targets. Support is going to be harder to come by.''
Bernanke has argued that a target would help cement the Fed's credibility as an inflation-fighter and make it easier to manage the economy. If he's unable to press ahead, supporters say, those aims might be damaged.
Bernanke's idea already faced opposition within the Fed, and former officials said before the Nov. 7 election that adoption of an inflation target was likely to be a gradual process.
While Bernanke stated in his Senate confirmation hearing last year that the independent Fed can adopt a numerical target for inflation on its own, he's unlikely to proceed without at least the tacit support of key lawmakers. The 52-year-old chairman has said it's important to ``vet'' any such shift with the congressional committees that oversee the central bank. That could be complicated by Democrats taking over the committees.
Under current law, the Fed has a mandate for both price stability and full employment.
Bernanke, picked by Republican President George W. Bush to succeed Alan Greenspan, has said that the adoption of an inflation target would bolster rather than hinder the Fed's ability to achieve both goals. |
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