Bernanke suggests creation of bad bank

 

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke warned that a fiscal stimulus won’t be enough to spur an economic recovery and that the government may need to buy or guarantee banks’ tainted assets to reviv

growth.

“Fiscal actions are unlikely to promote a lasting recovery unless they are accompanied by strong measures to further stabilize and strengthen the financial system,” Bernanke, 55, said in the text of a speec

at the London School of Economics. “More capital injections and guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and the normalization of credit markets

Bernanke’s speech indicates he sees further government aid to the U.S. financial system as essential to an economic recovery. The U.S. Treasury has already channeled $350 billion in taxpayer funds to

recapitalize banks and other financial institutions, while the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. has guaranteed principle and interest payments on $111.2 billion in bonds issued by financial companies.

The Fed chairman recommended three approaches on troubled assets. Public purchases of the bad assets are one possibility, as was originally planned under U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson’s Troubled

Asset Relief Program, the Fed chairman said.

The government could also agree to absorb, in exchange for warrants or a fee, part of the losses on a specified portfolio of troubled assets, he said. Regulators used that method recently with Citigroup Inc.

Another measure “would be to set up and capitalize so- called bad banks, which would purchase assets from financial institutions in exchange for cash and equity in the bad banks,” he said. Finally, effort

to reduce preventable foreclosures “could strengthen the housing market and reduce mortgage losses” and increase financial stability, Bernanke sai

The Fed chairman said the U.S. central bank still has powerful tools to influence growth and prices.

Bloomberg.com: Worldwide

 

I don’t know why they are calling bad banks, but I think is a good strategy to boost the economy, but I don’t understand something, is that plan is for every country does have crisis or just for Europe or for America