Janet  Yellen has made it clear that “probably a  rise in interest rates in the coming months would  be appropriate.” Because “if the  economy and the labor market will continue to  improve” is correct for the Fed to intervene  in a “cautious and gradual” with an  increase in the cost of money. Yellen, speaking at  Harvard University, has avoided excessive offer  certainty to the markets or tie the hands of the  Central Bank: a tight monetary policy too hasty  and aggressive, he warned, rather than to the  United States make progress towards normalization  of risk ‘result economic downturns “,  before which the Fed today would have”  little instruments “to respond. 
 
Change annualized US GDP (*) second estimate (source: US Department of Commerce)
 the Federal Reserve chairman has indicated,  however, that consensus within the Fed, as  revealed by reports of recent summits and by the  recent statements of several hawks and doves of  the central Bank, it leans decidedly to a move now  to the doors. Yellen added that now, more than  monetary policy, “a greater role in  supporting the economy it is for the tax  policy.” 
 
 At his words the chance to close in June of a  quarter point, futures markets, have for the  moment remained below 50%, but those of a maneuver  in July rose to 62 percent. Dollar and bond  yields, particularly in the short term and more  sensitive to the narrow, have reacted quickly  gaining ground. 
 More succinctly the  chairperson Fed then gave body to your message by  dissecting the framework of the recovery. She  pointed out that the labor market is “really  improved” in every respect. That “the  rate of unemployed is close to what most  economists consider full employment.” It  noted that the improvements in the level of labor  force participation, in the past among the most  striking weaknesses, “are  encouraging.” The Fed chairman warned,  though – indication of circumspection with  which he intends to get closer still to its  decisions – such as wages have not shown  “significant improvement”, such as  growth remains “low remarcabilmente”  and the march of productivity appears “very  slow” . 
 Yellen, in the halls of the  Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study of the  prestigious University of Massachusetts, also has  raised the tone of his speech to the longer-term  challenges. “There is no better economic  system of capitalism, but it can happen that  periodically break,” he said. One of these  “broken” was the great crisis of the  past years. Fed Chairman expressed gratitude to  his predecessor as head of the Central Bank, which  took head-on the challenge of the financial  debacle and the recession of 2008. “America  – he said – has a huge debt of  gratitude to Ben Bernanke” . Yellen  acknowledged that “we had not seen the  arrival of the crisis.” But his  administration, he added, at last, “was  nothing less than magnificent,” thanks to  Bernanke. 
 

European shares close flat waiting for Yellen. Oil below $ 50
Today, he continued taking lessons for the present, there have been important steps forward to prevent similar dangers from happening again. “A growing body of research helps our understanding of systemic risks and macroeconomics,” he assured. In particular just the Fed “is dedicating more resources to discover the risks to financial stability and better understand how to do it.” Since then there is a “new attitude in the supervision of large financial companies.” And the work of the American authorities is not isolated, is conducted “in close contact and cooperation with regulators in other countries to deal with cross-border issues”
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