Fed chief pleads for more housing relief
The weak housing market has affected overall economic activity, Bernanke said.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke pleaded Thursday for more government action to relieve the foreclosure crisis and break a vicious cycle in which the housing meltdown is plunging the country deeper into recession.
Beaten-down shoppers, meanwhile, handed retailers their worst month in at least 39 years. And the number of people drawing jobless benefits hit a 26-year high, with the November employment figures due out today likely to show more deep job cuts.
“We are probably at the absolute worst of the recession right now,” said Mark Vitner, economist at Wachovia Corp.
With soaring foreclosures feeding the country’s economic woes, Bernanke called on the government to ratchet up efforts to help people at risk of losing their homes.
Despite steps already taken to try to ease the crisis, foreclosures remain “too high,” hurting homeowners, lenders and the broader economy, Bernanke told a Fed conference here on housing finance.
“More needs to be done,” he declared.
Lenders appear on track to initiate 2.25 million foreclosures this year, up from an average annual pace of less than 1 million before the crisis, he said.
“Weakness in the housing market has proved a serious drag on overall economic activity,” Bernanke said. “Steps that stabilize the housing market will help stabilize the economy as well.”
The fallout is forcing consumers to hibernate, and retailers have suffered the consequences.
Fresh information on layoffs, released by the Labor Department, showed that the number of new applications for unemployment benefits dipped to 509,000 last week. Even with the drop, though, the figure was still high and pointed to a deeply troubled employment climate.
The number of people continuing to claim unemployment benefits last week reached 4.09 million, the highest level since December 1982. Even when today’s larger work force is factored in, the proportion of workers who are continuing to receive jobless benefits matches a level last reached in September 1992, when the economy was recovering from a recession.
The unemployment rate, which bolted to a 14-year high of 6.5 percent in October, is expected to climb to 6.8 percent in November when the government releases new employment data today. If the forecasts are correct, that would mark the highest jobless rate in 15 years. Employers, which have slashed 1.2 million jobs this year alone, probably will ax another 320,000, analysts say.
Fighting for their survival, the chiefs of Chrysler LLC, General Motors Corp. and Ford Motor Co. returned to Capitol Hill on Thursday to make a fresh plea for as much as $34 billion in emergency aid. Trying to win over skeptical lawmakers, automakers and their union have promised labor concessions and restructuring. Were one or more of Detroit’s Big Three to fail, that would deepen the recession and cause more job losses, industry officials warned.
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