2006年VOA标准英语-Worries Over Inflation Send US Stocks Tumbling(在线收听) |
By George Dwyer ---------------------------------------- Stocks fell sharply on Wall Street this week after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke told an audience of bankers he is uneasy about so-called "core inflation" levels in the economy.
Market experts may have become jittery because core inflation figures are believed to provide a clearer indication of an economy's performance than do measurements of overall inflation. Peter Morici (file photo) Although oil prices are up by about a third in just the past year, economists say the United States has absorbed those increases fairly well so far. As former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan told Congress this week, that situation cannot go on indefinitely. "Rising prices per se need not have an effect on American economic growth if the rise is gradual and the adjustment process is able to take place,” he said. “But a shock has got to be absorbed in one form or another and in this particular stage we don't have a backup other than the strategic petroleum reserve and our flexibility; we’ve got to find more ways to deal with this problem." In the meantime, Wall Street worries that the Fed will respond to the latest core inflation data by raising interest rates yet again, which is a concern, says Morici, that is not unfounded. "If inflation is stoking up, the Fed will want to slow the economy. It will raise interest rates,” he said. “Higher interest rates tend to dampen the stock market – not long term, but over a period of several months it drags lower, temporarily." How long "temporarily" will last remains to be seen |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/6/32892.html |