Word: board
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...balance, the board sees the economy remaining in recession until perhaps the summer of 1980. The total slide in the nation's output of goods and services would be anywhere from about 2% to 4%. Inflation will remain locked in double digits for the rest of 1979, but could edge down somewhat next year...
Even before the opening bell rang, the traders, specialists, clerks and messengers who work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange sensed that Wednesday would not be an ordinary day. The Federal Reserve Board's decision to raise the prime rate had already rocked the stock market, triggering a frenzied sell-off that had sent the market plummeting by a startling 26 points on Tuesday-the worst setback it had suffered in nearly six years. Now, at brokers' booths and trading stations, everybody was fretting about what worried investors would do next. "We're going...
...TIME Board of Economists generally backs the Fed's decision...
Belated and drastic, but unavoidable. That is the majority opinion of TIME'S Board of Economists about the Federal Reserve Board's severe credit-tightening moves. Only one of the ten board members flatly opposed the new policy. The rest generally thought the Fed's actions would help bring down inflation at last, though slowly, at the price of a recession that most still believe will be less severe than the 1973-75 slump, but deeper than was thought a few months ago. Several cautioned, however, that continued turbulence in financial markets and the economy make...
...president of Chicago's Harris Bank. "The Fed's actions greatly increase the odds of getting inflation under control in the longer run." Sprinkel has long argued that the old policy of trying to control the money supply by fine-tuning key interest rates often forced the board to pump more funds into the economy than it wanted to, thus aggravating inflation. "Now that they are focusing on central control of [banking] reserves," he says, "and assuming they follow through, I think it assures that we are going to have more stable money growth." Sprinkel adds that...