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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Bernanke’s comments trending upward

Here’s a look at Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s recent comments on the economy:

Jan. 13 – “Fiscal policy can stimulate economic activity, but a sustained recovery will also require a comprehensive plan to stabilize the financial system and restore normal flows of credit,” Bernanke said at the London School of Economics.

Feb. 24 – Bernanke said he hoped the recession would end this year but that there were significant risks to that forecast. Any economic turnaround will hinge on the success of the Fed and the Obama administration in getting credit and financial markets to operate more normally again.

March 3 – Testifying to the Senate Budget Committee on the bailout of American International Group Inc., Bernanke didn’t repeat remarks he had made a week earlier that the recession could end this year if the government succeeded in turning around wobbly financial markets.

March 10 – The recession was more severe than the Fed had expected, Bernanke acknowledged after a speech to the Council on Foreign Relations. Still, he added there’s a “good chance” the recession could end this year if the government managed to get financial markets to operate more normally again.

March 15 – “We’ll see the recession coming to an end probably this year,” if the government succeeds in bolstering the banking system, Bernanke said in an interview with CBS TV program “60 Minutes.”

April 14 – “Recently we have seen tentative signs that the sharp decline in economic activity may be slowing,” Bernanke said in a speech at Morehouse College in Atlanta. “To be sure, we will not have a sustainable recovery without a stabilization of our financial system and credit markets.”

Tuesday – “We continue to expect economic activity to bottom out, then to turn up later this year,” Bernanke told lawmakers, sounding more confident about the prospects for a recovery later in 2009.