from CNBC:
The United States is on a fiscal path towards  insolvency and policymakers are at a "tipping point," a Federal Reserve  official said on Tuesday.
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Jean Ayissi | AFP | Getty Images  | 
"If  we continue down on the path on which the fiscal authorities put us, we  will become insolvent, the question is when," Dallas Federal Reserve  Bank President Richard Fisher said in a question and answer session  after delivering a speech at the University of Frankfurt. "The  short-term negotiations are very important, I look at this as a tipping  point."
\But he  added he was confident in the Americans' ability to take the right  decisions and said the country would avoid insolvency.
"I think we are at the beginning of the process and it's going to be very painful," he added.
Fisher  earlier said the US economic recovery is gathering momentum, adding  that he personally was extremely vigilant on inflation pressures.
"We  are all mindful of this phenomenon. Speaking personally, I am concerned  and I am going to be extremely vigilant on that front," Fisher said in  an interview with CNBC.
Fisher added that the U.S. Federal Reserve had  ways to tighten its monetary policy other than interest rates, including  by selling Treasurys, changing reserves levels and using time deposits.He added that he does not support the Fed embarking on an additional round of quantitative easing. 
"Barring  some extraordinary circumstance I cannot forsee...I would vote against a  QE3," Fisher told CNBC. "I don't think it's necessary. Again, we have a  self-sustaining recovery."
