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Summers Warns Next U.S. Recession Could Outlast Previous One

Next U.S. recession could be longer than the last one that lasted 18 months, said former treasury secretary Summers.

Summers Warns Next U.S. Recession Could Outlast Previous One
Traffic moves on a highway in this photo taken with a tilt shift lens in Boston, Massachusetts. (Photographer: Brent Lewin/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The next U.S. recession could drag on longer than the last one that stretched 18 months. That’s the assessment of former Treasury Secretary Larry Summers.

With the economy in its ninth year of expansion, even if one were to take a hawkish view of upcoming Federal Reserve tightening, it would be some time before the level of interest rates rates gets high enough to allow them to again be reduced by the 500 basis points typical for a U.S. recession, Summers said at a conference in Abu Dhabi.

“That suggests that in the next few years a recession will come and we will in a sense have already shot the monetary and fiscal policy cannons, and that suggests the next recession might be more protracted,” he said during a panel with Bloomberg Television’s Erik Schatzker on Wednesday.

Summers Warns Next U.S. Recession Could Outlast Previous One

Later in an interview with Bloomberg Television, Summers said the economic situation the new Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell faces is “a difficult balance between the legitimate desire to stimulate the economy and to get as much employment and growth as possible, and certainly to assure that inflation gets back to 2 percent.”

“At the same time I think he has to worry about the financial foundation for recovery if you’re the Fed chair, so I think there’s a balance to be struck," Summers said.

--With assistance from Lorenzo Totaro and Kevin Costelloe

To contact the reporter on this story: Catherine Bosley in Zurich at cbosley1@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Fergal O'Brien at fobrien@bloomberg.net, Flavia Krause-Jackson, Brian Swint

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