Hoenig is the longest-serving and most experienced Fed Bank president. 
WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) -- In perhaps one of the sharpest critiques of  Federal Reserve policy ever from a sitting policy member, Thomas Hoenig,  the president of the Kansas City Federal Reserve Bank, said zero  interest rates were "a dangerous gamble" in a period of moderate growth.  In a speech in Lincoln, Nebraska, Hoenig warned that Fed Chairman Ben  Bernanke and his allies were trying to use monetary policy as a  "cure-all" for "every problem faced by the United States today." Keeping  rates too low for too long will only lead to a repeat of the cycle of  severe recession and unemployment in a few short years, he warned.  Hoenig has dissented at every Fed policy meeting this year. He wants the  Fed to commit to a slow and gradual increase in the target Federal  funds rate. Hoenig argued that the economic news was not as bad as  reported in the media and described by Wall Street experts. The markets  want zero rates to continue because they are earning guaranteed returns  on free money, he said. Hoenig dismissed fears of deflation.
Friday, August 13, 2010
Fed's Hoenig: Current Policy is "a Dangerous Gamble"
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Fed,
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interest rates