US economy growing 'moderately', says Federal Reserve

2011-01-13 03:37:56

The US economy continued to grow moderately in December, but the weak housing

market was still acting as a brake, says the Federal Reserve.

In its latest Beige Book report, the US central bank said the manufacturing

sector continued to enjoy the biggest upturn, while retailers saw a rise in

sales over Christmas.

The Fed said the housing sector remained subdued across the US.

The data showed the US economy grew by 2.6% between July and September.

However, this annualised level is too low to tackle the country's continuing

high level of unemployment.

The most recent figures showed that the US jobless rate totalled 9.4% in

December.

The Fed is now continuing to buy $600bn ( 381bn) of bonds to help stimulate the

economy.

Meanwhile, interest rates remain at between 0% and 0.25%.

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke warned last week that the US economy

recovery would continue to be slow.

The central bank's Federal Open Market Committee next meets to discuss interest

rates on 25-26 January.

It was a major downturn in the US housing market that sparked the global

financial crisis in 2007, as it revealed substantial bad US mortgage debt.