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버냉키 연준 의장, 의회 '경제전망' 증언문(영문)

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※ 번역할 언어 선택

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke

The economic outlook
Before the Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of Representatives
January 17, 2008
Chairman Spratt, Representative Ryan, and other members of the Committee, I am pleased to be here to offer my views on the near-term economic outlook and related issues.

Developments in Financial Markets
Since late last summer, financial markets in the United States and in a number of other industrialized countries have been under considerable strain. Heightened investor concerns about the credit quality of mortgages, especially subprime mortgages with adjustable interest rates, triggered the financial turmoil. Notably, as the rising rate of delinquencies of subprime mortgages threatened to impose losses on holders of even highly rated securities, investors were led to question the reliability of the credit ratings for a range of financial products, including structured credit products and various special-purpose vehicles. As investors lost confidence in their ability to value complex financial products, they became increasingly unwilling to hold such instruments. As a result, flows of credit through these vehicles have contracted significantly.

As these problems multiplied, money center banks and other large financial institutions, which in many cases had served as sponsors of these financial products, came under increasing pressure to take the assets of the off-balance-sheet vehicles onto their own balance sheets. Bank balance sheets were swelled further by holdings of nonconforming mortgages, leveraged loans, and other credits that the banks had extended but for which well-functioning secondary markets no longer existed. Even as their balance sheets expanded, banks began to report large losses, reflecting marked declines in the market prices of mortgages and other assets. Thus, banks too became subject to valuation uncertainty, as could be seen in the sharp movements in their share prices and in other market indicators such as quotes on credit default swaps. The combination of larger balance sheets and unexpected losses prompted banks to become protective of their liquidity and balance sheet capacity and thus to become less willing to provide funding to other market participants, including other banks. Banks have also evidently become more restrictive in their lending to firms and households. More-expensive and less-available credit seems likely to impose a measure of restraint on economic growth.

The Outlook for the Real Economy
To date, the largest effects of the financial turmoil appear to have been on the housing market, which, as you know, has deteriorated significantly over the past two years or so. The virtual shutdown of the subprime mortgage market and a widening of spreads on jumbo mortgage loans have further reduced the demand for housing, while foreclosures are adding to the already-elevated inventory of unsold homes. New home sales and housing starts have both fallen by about half from their respective peaks. The number of homes in inventory has begun to edge down, but at the current sales pace the months' supply of new homes has continued to climb, and home prices are falling in many parts of the country. The slowing in residential construction, which subtracted about 1 percentage point from the growth rate of real gross domestic product in the third quarter of 2007, likely curtailed growth even more in the fourth quarter, and it may continue to be a drag on growth for a good part of this year as well.

Recently, incoming information has suggested that the baseline outlook for real activity in 2008 has worsened and that the downside risks to growth have become more pronounced. In particular, a number of factors, including continuing increases in energy prices, lower equity prices, and softening home values, seem likely to weigh on consumer spending as we move into 2008. Consumer spending also depends importantly on the state of the labor market, as wages and salaries are the primary source of income for most households. Labor market conditions in December were disappointing; the unemployment rate increased 0.3 percentage point, to 5.0 percent from 4.7 percent in November, and private payroll employment declined. Employment in residential construction posted another substantial reduction, and employment in manufacturing and retail trade also decreased significantly. Employment in services continued to grow, but at a slower pace in December than in earlier months. It would be a mistake to read too much into one month's data. However, developments in the labor market will bear close attention.

In the business sector, investment in equipment and software appears to have been sluggish in the fourth quarter, while nonresidential construction grew briskly. In light of the softening in economic activity and the adverse developments in credit markets, growth in both types of investment spending seems likely to slow in coming months. Outside the United States, however, economic activity in our major trading partners has continued to expand vigorously. U.S. exports will likely continue to grow at a healthy pace in coming quarters, providing some impetus to the domestic economy.

Financial conditions continue to pose a downside risk to the outlook. Market participants still express considerable uncertainty about the appropriate valuation of complex financial assets and about the extent of additional losses that may be disclosed in the future. On the whole, despite improvements in some areas, the financial situation remains fragile, and many funding markets remain impaired. Adverse economic or financial news thus has the potential to increase financial strains and to lead to further constraints on the supply of credit to households and businesses.

Even as the outlook for real activity has weakened, some important developments have occurred on the inflation front. Most notably, the same increase in oil prices that may be a negative influence on growth is also lifting overall consumer prices. Last year, food prices also increased exceptionally rapidly by recent standards, further boosting overall consumer price inflation. The most recent reading on overall personal consumption expenditure inflation showed that prices in November were 3.6 percent higher than they were a year earlier. Core price inflation (which excludes prices of food and energy) has stepped up recently as well, with November prices up almost 2-1/4 percent from a year earlier. Part of this rise may reflect pass-through of energy costs to the prices of core consumer goods and services, as well as the effects of the depreciation of the dollar on import prices, although some other prices--such as those for some medical and financial services--have also accelerated lately.1

Thus far, the public's expectations of future inflation appear to have remained reasonably well anchored, and pressures on resource utilization have diminished a bit. Further, futures markets suggest that food and energy prices will decelerate over the coming year. Given these factors, overall and core inflation should moderate this year and next, so long as the public's confidence in the Federal Reserve's commitment to price stability is unshaken. However, any tendency of inflation expectations to become unmoored or for the Fed's inflation-fighting credibility to be eroded could greatly complicate the task of sustaining price stability and reduce the central bank's policy flexibility to counter shortfalls in growth in the future. Accordingly, in the months ahead we will be closely monitoring the inflation situation, particularly inflation expectations.

Monetary Policy Response
The Federal Reserve has taken a number of steps to help markets return to more orderly functioning and to foster its economic objectives of maximum sustainable employment and price stability. Broadly, the Federal Reserve's response has followed two tracks: efforts to improve market liquidity and functioning and the pursuit of our macroeconomic objectives through monetary policy.

To help address the significant strains in short-term money markets, the Federal Reserve has taken a range of steps. Notably, on August 17, the Federal Reserve Board cut the discount rate--the rate at which it lends directly to banks--by 50 basis points, or 1/2 percentage point, and it has since maintained the spread between the federal funds rate and the discount rate at 50 basis points, rather than the customary 100 basis points. In addition, the Federal Reserve recently unveiled a term auction facility, or TAF, through which prespecified amounts of discount window credit can be auctioned to eligible borrowers. The goal of the TAF is to reduce the incentive for banks to hoard cash and increase their willingness to provide credit to households and firms. In December, the Fed successfully auctioned $40 billion through this facility. And, as part of a coordinated operation, the European Central Bank and the Swiss National Bank lent an additional $24 billion to banks in their respective jurisdictions. This month, the Federal Reserve is auctioning $60 billion in twenty-eight-day credit through the TAF, to be spread across two auctions. TAF auctions will continue as long as necessary to address elevated pressures in short-term funding markets, and we will continue to work closely and cooperatively with other central banks to address market strains that could hamper the achievement of our broader economic objectives.

Although the TAF and other liquidity-related actions appear to have had some positive effects, such measures alone cannot fully address fundamental concerns about credit quality and valuation, nor do these actions relax the balance sheet constraints on financial institutions. Hence, they alone cannot eliminate the financial restraints affecting the broader economy. Monetary policy (that is, the management of the short-term interest rate) is the Fed's best tool for pursuing our macroeconomic objectives, namely to promote maximum sustainable employment and price stability.

Monetary policy has responded proactively to evolving conditions. As you know, the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) cut its target for the federal funds rate by 50 basis points at its September meeting and by 25 basis points each at the October and December meetings. In total, therefore, we have brought the federal funds rate down by 1 percentage point from its level just before the financial strains emerged. The Federal Reserve took these actions to help offset the restraint imposed by the tightening of credit conditions and the weakening of the housing market. However, in light of recent changes in the outlook for and the risks to growth, additional policy easing may well be necessary. The FOMC will, of course, be carefully evaluating incoming information bearing on the economic outlook. Based on that evaluation, and consistent with our dual mandate, we stand ready to take substantive additional action as needed to support growth and to provide adequate insurance against downside risks.

Financial and economic conditions can change quickly. Consequently, the FOMC must remain exceptionally alert and flexible, prepared to act in a decisive and timely manner and, in particular, to counter any adverse dynamics that might threaten economic or financial stability.

A number of analysts have raised the possibility that fiscal policy actions might usefully complement monetary policy in supporting economic growth over the next year or so. I agree that fiscal action could be helpful in principle, as fiscal and monetary stimulus together may provide broader support for the economy than monetary policy actions alone. But the design and implementation of the fiscal program are critically important. A fiscal initiative at this juncture could prove quite counterproductive, if (for example) it provided economic stimulus at the wrong time or compromised fiscal discipline in the longer term.

To be useful, a fiscal stimulus package should be implemented quickly and structured so that its effects on aggregate spending are felt as much as possible within the next twelve months or so. Stimulus that comes too late will not help support economic activity in the near term, and it could be actively destabilizing if it comes at a time when growth is already improving. Thus, fiscal measures that involve long lead times or result in additional economic activity only over a protracted period, whatever their intrinsic merits might be, will not provide stimulus when it is most needed. Any fiscal package should also be efficient, in the sense of maximizing the amount of near-term stimulus per dollar of increased federal expenditure or lost revenue. Finally, any program should be explicitly temporary, both to avoid unwanted stimulus beyond the near-term horizon and, importantly, to preclude an increase in the federal government's structural budget deficit. As I have discussed on other occasions, the nation faces daunting long-run budget challenges associated with an aging population, rising health-care costs, and other factors. A fiscal program that increased the structural budget deficit would only make confronting those challenges more difficult.

Thank you. I would be pleased to take your questions.


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Footnotes

1. Prices for some financial services are implicit; for example, depositors may pay for "free" checking services only indirectly, by accepting a lower interest rate on their deposits. The Bureau of Labor Statistics uses estimates of such prices, as well as other nonmarket prices, in calculating the inflation rate. Return to text

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'채해병 순직' 임성근 1심 징역 3년 [서울=뉴스핌] 박민경 기자 = 채해병 순직사건과 관련해 업무상과실치사상 혐의를 받는 임성근 전 해병대 1사단장이 8일 1심 선고에서 징역 3년을 선고받았다. 서울중앙지법 형사합의22부(재판장 조형우)는 이날 오전 업무상과실치사상 등 혐의를 받는 임 전 사단장에게 징역 3년을 선고했다. 재판부는 박상현 전 해병대 1사단 7여단장에게 금고 1년 6개월 ·최진규 전 11포병대대장 금고 1년 6개월·이용민 전 7포병대대장 금고 10개월 ·전 7포병대대 본부중대장 장모 씨에게 금고 8개월 2년 집행유예를 각각 선고했다. 재판부는 박 전 여단장, 최 전 대대장, 이 전 대대장에 대해서는 "오랜 수사와 재판이 진행됐고, 1심에서 실형이 선고된 점 등에 비춰 도주 우려가 있다고 판단된다"며 "앞서 선고한 업무상과실치사 혐의와 관련해 법정구속한다"고 밝혔다. 서울중앙지법 형사합의22부(재판장 조형우)는 8일 오전 업무상과실치사상 등 혐의를 받는 임 전 사단장에게 징역 3년을 선고했다. 사진은 임 전 사단장. [사진=뉴스핌 DB] 재판부는 양형 이유에 대해 "당시 지휘부는 수색 작전 과정에서 안전사고 위험이 충분히 존재한다는 점을 인식하고 있었음에도 대원들에게 필요한 안전장비를 제대로 구비·지급하지 않았다"고 지적했다. 이어 "사단장과 여단장 등 상급 지휘관들은 수중 수색을 중단시키거나 물가 접근 자체를 통제하는 방식으로 홍수 범람 위험을 미연에 방지했어야 했다"며 "그럼에도 불분명한 작전 지휘 상황 속에서 오로지 가시적 성과를 내는 데 몰두한 나머지 '더 내려가서 헤치고 꼼꼼히 수색하라'는 식의 적극적·공세적 지휘를 반복했다"고 판단했다. 재판부는 특히 "위험지역에서 성과를 얻는 과정에서 필연적으로 수반되는 대원들의 생명·신체 위험을 사실상 도외시했다"며 "수색에 투입된 장병들이 구조 장비조차 제대로 지급받지 못한 상태였고, 허리 높이까지 물에 들어가라는 취지의 지시가 내려졌음에도 안전 확보와 관련한 구체적 조치는 전혀 없었다"고 밝혔다. 그러면서 "사단장·여단장·대대장 등 지휘관들은 장병들의 생명과 안전을 보호할 의무가 있음에도 이를 소홀히 했고, 단순한 부작위에 그친 것이 아니라 위험을 인지하고도 오히려 위험을 가중시키는 적극적 지시를 내렸다"며 "사망이라는 중대한 결과에 상응하는 책임을 묻는 것이 마땅하다"고 판시했다. 순직해병 특검팀(특별검사 이명현)은 지난달 13일 열린 결심 공판에서 임 전 사단장에게 징역 5년을 선고해달라고 재판부에 요청했다. 특검은 "임성근은 해병대원들의 안전보다 적극적 수색을 강조하며 반복적으로 질책해 사고 발생에 결정적 영향을 미쳤다"며 임 전 사단장에게 징역 5년을 선고해 달라고 재판부에 요청했다. 특검은 업무상 과실치사 등 혐의로 함께 기소된 박 전 여단장에게 금고 2년 6개월, 최 전 대대장에게 금고 2년 6개월, 이 전 대대장에게 금고 1년 6개월, 장씨에게 금고 1년을 각각 구형했다. 임 전 사단장 등 5명은 2023년 7월 19일 경북 예천군 보문교 부근 내성천 유역에서 집중호우 실종자 수색작전 도중 해병대원들이 구명조끼·안전로프 등을 착용하지 않은 채 수중수색을 하게 해 채해병이 급류에 휩쓸려 사망하게 한 혐의 등을 받는다. 임 전 사단장은 작전통제권을 육군 제50사단장에게 넘기도록 한 합동참모본부 및 육군 제2작전사령부의 단편명령을 어기고, 직접 수색 방식을 지시하고 인사 명령권을 행사하는 등 지휘권을 행사한 혐의도 받는다. 법원로고 [사진=뉴스핌DB] pmk1459@newspim.com                   2026-05-08 11:47
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KF-21, '전투용 적합' 최종판정 받다 [서울=뉴스핌] 오동룡 군사방산전문기자 = 한국형전투기(KF-21) 보라매가 7일 방위사업청으로부터 '전투용 적합' 판정을 획득하며 체계개발의 최종 관문을 통과했다. 2015년 12월 체계개발 착수 후 10년 5개월, 2023년 5월 '잠정 전투용 적합' 판정 이후 약 3년간의 후속 시험평가 끝에 이뤄진 결과다. 이로써 대한민국은 미국·러시아·중국·영국·프랑스·스웨덴·일본에 이어 독자 전투기 개발 능력을 완전히 확보한 8번째 국가로 자리매김했다. 지난 1월 12일 경남 사천 남해 상공에서 KF-21 시제 4호기가 비행성능 검증 임무를 수행하며 비행시험을 전면 완료했다. KF-21 개발은 총 1600여 회, 1만3000개 항목에 이르는 비행시험을 단 한 번의 사고 없이 완료하며 안전성을 입증했다. [사진=한국항공우주산업 제공] 2026.05.07 gomsi@newspim.com 방사청에 따르면, KF-21은 2021년 5월 최초 시험평가를 시작해 올 2월까지 약 5년간 지상시험을 통해 내구성과 구조 건전성을 검증했다. 특히 2022년 7월부터 2026년 1월까지 42개월간 진행된 비행시험에서는 총 1600여 회 비행에 단 한 건의 사고도 발생하지 않았다. 극저온·강우 등 악천후 조건 하 비행, 전자파 간섭 하 비행, 공중급유, 무장발사시험 등 1만3000여 개의 다양한 시험조건을 통해 비행 성능과 안정성을 완벽하게 검증한 것으로 평가된다. 이번 전투용 적합 판정은 KF-21 블록-I(기본성능·공대공 능력)의 모든 성능에 대한 검증이 완료됐음을 의미한다. 방사청은 KF-21이 공군의 작전운용성능(ROC)을 충족하고, 실제 전장 환경에서 임무 수행이 가능한 기술 수준과 안정성을 확보했다고 평가했다. 노지만 방사청 한국형전투기사업단장은 "국방부·합참·공군·한국항공우주산업(KAI)·국방과학연구소 등 민·관·군의 긴밀한 협력을 통해 이룬 결실"이라며 "향후 양산 및 전력화도 차질 없이 추진해 공군의 작전수행 능력을 한층 강화해 나가겠다"고 밝혔다. 방사청은 비행시험 효율화를 위해 시험 비행장을 사천에서 충남 서산까지 확대하고 국내 최초로 공중급유를 시험비행에 도입했다. 그 결과 개발 비행시험 기간을 당초 계획보다 2개월 앞당길 수 있었다. KF-21 체계개발 사업은 올해 6월 종료되며, 양산 1호기는 올해 하반기 공군에 인도될 예정이다. 양산 1호기는 지난 3월 25일 경남 사천 KAI 공장에서 출고됐으며, 4월 15일 출고 22일 만에 첫 비행에 성공했다. 이후 물량은 순차적으로 실전 배치될 계획이며, 추가무장시험을 통해 공대지 무장 능력도 확보할 예정이다. 공군은 2032년까지 총 120대를 전력화할 계획으로, KF-21은 노후화된 F-4E·F-5E 전투기를 대체하는 한편, 대한민국 영공방위의 핵심 전력으로 자리매김할 전망이다. 방사청은 "검증된 성능을 바탕으로 글로벌 방산 4대 강국 도약의 서막을 여는 K-방산 수출의 핵심 무기체계가 될 것"이라고 기대감을 나타냈다. gomsi@newspim.com 2026-05-07 11:35
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    우크라이나 전쟁 장기화 시 건설 및 중장비 수요 불확실성 직접적. 글로벌 인프라 투자 지연으로 매출 성장 둔화 가능성 있음.
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