You're reading: Will central banks rescue US, European economies?

 WASHINGTON (AP) — The world's top central bankers have said they're willing to rescue the economies of Europe and the United States. This week we'll find out if they are ready to act.

The Federal Reserve wraps up its two-day
policy meeting Wednesday. Chairman Ben Bernanke has pledged to act if
unemployment stays high. The European Central Bank meets Thursday — a
week after ECB President Mario Draghi vowed to “do whatever it takes” to
save the European common currency, the euro.

“The pressure is
building,” says Scott Wren, senior equity strategist at Wells Fargo. “It
is now a game of wait and see for the financial markets.”

Investors
are hoping the Fed and ECB will announce plans to flood markets with
cash through large-scale bond purchases. But economists caution that the
hopes might be dashed. The Fed might not be in a hurry to act. And
investors might be expecting more of Draghi than he can deliver.

Economies
on both sides of the Atlantic need help. Unemployment in the 17
countries that use the euro remained at a record 11.2 percent in June,
the European Union reported Tuesday. The International Monetary Fund
expects the eurozone economy to shrink 0.3 percent this year.

The
U.S. government announced last week that the American economy grew at a
listless 1.5 percent annual pace from April through June, even slower
than the 2 percent rate in the first three months of the year. On
Friday, the Labor Department will reveal just how bad the American job
market is. Economists expect the unemployment rate remained at 8.2
percent for the third straight month in July and that the economy
generated just 100,000 jobs, not enough to keep pace with population
growth. The first three months of 2012 job growth averaged more than
225,000 a month.

Still, many economists say the U.S. economy isn’t
yet weak enough to push the Fed to act now. Some good news dribbled in
Tuesday: The Conference Board said consumer confidence rose in July for
the first time in five months. The Commerce Department said Americans’
incomes grew in June at the fastest pace in three months. And the
Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home index showed that home prices
rose in May from April in every city the index tracks.

Economists
say it’s more likely the U.S. central bank will wait until its next
meeting Sept. 12-13 if they’re going to do something. One option,
eagerly awaited by financial markets, is a third round of bond purchases
designed to push down long-term interest rates, a policy known as
“quantitative easing” or QE3. Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow
Financial, predicts that the Fed “will stimulate further, but probably
not pull the trigger on QE3 until September.”

Economists worry
that Fed action won’t make much difference anyway: Long-term rates are
already at historic lows but haven’t done much to spur consumer
spending.

The Commerce Department reported Tuesday that consumers
spent no more in June than they did in May — bad news for an economy
that relies on consumer spending for 70 percent of output.

But
Americans’ incomes and savings rose in June, possibly laying the
groundwork for more spending and perhaps stronger economic growth in
coming months.

The Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price
index released Tuesday showed increases in all of the 20 cities tracked.
And a measure of national prices rose 2.2 percent from April to May,
the second increase after seven months of flat or declining readings.

Phoenix,
one of the cities hit hardest by the housing slump, posted the
strongest year-over-year gain in home prices. Still, prices there remain
more than 50 percent below their peak, reached in summer 2006.

The
Conference Board said Tuesday that its Consumer Confidence Index
increased to 65.9, from 62.7 in June, the first increase in five months.
That’s the highest reading since April and better than the reading of
62 that economists had expected.

The ECB is under even more pressure than the Fed. The 17 countries that use the euro are struggling with deepening recessions.

Investors
have been demanding record high interest rates on Spanish government
bonds because they’re worried Spain will be overwhelmed by the cost of
bailing out its troubled banks and regional governments. That has raised
fears the country may be the next to seek a bailout from the other
eurozone countries, following Ireland, Greece, Portugal and Cyprus.
Italy, too, is struggling to control its debts as a stagnant economy
pinches tax revenues and drives up spending on unemployment benefits and
other social programs. The fear is that the pressure will force
struggling countries to abandon the euro, something that would rattle
financial markets and rock the global economy.

Last Thursday,
Draghi sharply raised expectations for more central bank action when he
vowed the ECB would do “whatever it takes” to save the 17-country euro,
and that “believe me, it will be enough.” Markets jumped on the news,
expecting that the bank could soon intervene in bond markets to drive
down the borrowing costs for Spain, Italy and other European countries.

“Stock
investors will not let the ECB get away with subtle hints and opaque
statements,” says Wren of Wells Fargo. “The ECB is under much more
pressure to give the market what it wants: a statement that says it will
step in and buy the sovereign debt of Spain and Italy.”

But economists worry that Draghi might have spoken too boldly and too soon.

The
ECB’s founding treaty requires the central bank to fight inflation
first and only then to pursue other goals, such as stimulating economic
growth. By contrast, other central banks, such as the U.S. Federal
Reserve and the Bank of England, have broader crisis-fighting powers.

Jonathan
Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics in London, says
Draghi’s remarks last week were a “pretty strong signal” the bank might
intervene in government bond markets with limited purchases aimed at
lowering countries’ borrowing costs, as it has before on a limited
basis. Markets, however, appear to hope for that plus more, a
comprehensive new approach.

“My guess is, the markets will be disappointed,” Loynes said.