전체기사 최신뉴스 GAM
KYD 디데이
글로벌

속보

더보기

버냉키, 하버드대학 강연문(영문)

기사입력 :

최종수정 :

※ 본문 글자 크기 조정

  • 더 작게
  • 작게
  • 보통
  • 크게
  • 더 크게

※ 번역할 언어 선택

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
Remarks on Class Day 2008
At Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts
June 4, 2008

It seems to me, paradoxically, that both long ago and only yesterday I attended my own Class Day in 1975. I am pleased and honored to be invited back by the students of Harvard. Our speaker in 1975 was Dick Gregory, the social critic and comedian, who was inclined toward the sharp-edged and satiric. Central bankers don't do satire as a rule, so I am going to have to strive for "kind of interesting."

When I attended Class Day as a graduating senior, Gerald Ford was President, and an up-and-coming fellow named Alan Greenspan was his chief economic adviser. Just weeks earlier, the last Americans remaining in Saigon had been evacuated by helicopters. On a happier note, the Red Sox were on their way to winning the American League pennant. I skipped classes to attend a World Series game against the Cincinnati Reds. As was their wont in those days, the Sox came agonizingly close to a championship but ended up snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. On that score, as on others--disco music and Pet Rocks come to mind--many things are better today than they were then. In fact, that will be a theme of my remarks today.

Although 1975 was a pretty good year for the Red Sox, it was not a good one for the U.S. economy. Then as now, we were experiencing a serious oil price shock, sharply rising prices for food and other commodities, and subpar economic growth. But I see the differences between the economy of 1975 and the economy of 2008 as more telling than the similarities. Today's situation differs from that of 33 years ago in large part because our economy and society have become much more flexible and able to adapt to difficult situations and new challenges. Economic policymaking has improved as well, I believe, partly because we have learned well some of the hard lessons of the past. Of course, I do not want to minimize the challenges we currently face, and I will come back to a few of these. But I do think that our demonstrated ability to respond constructively and effectively to past economic problems provides a basis for optimism about the future.

I will focus my remarks today on two economic issues that challenged us in the 1970s and that still do so today--energy and productivity. These, obviously, are not the kind of topics chosen by many recent Class Day speakers--Will Farrell, Ali G, or Seth MacFarlane, to name a few. But, then, the Class Marshals presumably knew what they were getting when they invited an economist.

Because the members of today's graduating class--and some of your professors--were not yet born in 1975, let me begin by briefly surveying the economic landscape in the mid-1970s. The economy had just gone through a severe recession, during which output, income, and employment fell sharply and the unemployment rate rose to 9 percent. Meanwhile, consumer price inflation, which had been around 3 percent to 4 percent earlier in the decade, soared to more than 10 percent during my senior year.1

The oil price shock of the 1970s began in October 1973 when, in response to the Yom Kippur War, Arab oil producers imposed an embargo on exports. Before the embargo, in 1972, the price of imported oil was about $3.20 per barrel; by 1975, the average price was nearly $14 per barrel, more than four times greater. President Nixon had imposed economy-wide controls on wages and prices in 1971, including prices of petroleum products; in November 1973, in the wake of the embargo, the President placed additional controls on petroleum prices.2

As basic economics predicts, when a scarce resource cannot be allocated by market-determined prices, it will be allocated some other way--in this case, in what was to become an iconic symbol of the times, by long lines at gasoline stations. In 1974, in an attempt to overcome the unintended consequences of price controls, drivers in many places were permitted to buy gasoline only on odd or even days of the month, depending on the last digit of their license plate number. Moreover, with the controlled price of U.S. crude oil well below world prices, growth in domestic exploration slowed and production was curtailed--which, of course, only made things worse.

In addition to creating long lines at gasoline stations, the oil price shock exacerbated what was already an intensifying buildup of inflation and inflation expectations. In another echo of today, the inflationary situation was further worsened by rapidly rising prices of agricultural products and other commodities.

Economists generally agree that monetary policy performed poorly during this period. In part, this was because policymakers, in choosing what they believed to be the appropriate setting for monetary policy, overestimated the productive capacity of the economy. I'll have more to say about this shortly. Federal Reserve policymakers also underestimated both their own contributions to the inflationary problems of the time and their ability to curb that inflation. For example, on occasion they blamed inflation on so-called cost-push factors such as union wage pressures and price increases by large, market-dominating firms; however, the abilities of unions and firms to push through inflationary wage and price increases were symptoms of the problem, not the underlying cause. Several years passed before the Federal Reserve gained a new leadership that better understood the central bank's role in the inflation process and that sustained anti-inflationary monetary policies would actually work. Beginning in 1979, such policies were implemented successfully--although not without significant cost in terms of lost output and employment--under Fed Chairman Paul Volcker. For the Federal Reserve, two crucial lessons from this experience were, first, that high inflation can seriously destabilize the economy and, second, that the central bank must take responsibility for achieving price stability over the medium term.

Fast-forward now to 2003. In that year, crude oil cost a little more than $30 per barrel.3 Since then, crude oil prices have increased more than fourfold, proportionally about as much as in the 1970s. Now, as in 1975, adjusting to such high prices for crude oil has been painful. Gas prices around $4 a gallon are a huge burden for many households, as well as for truckers, manufacturers, farmers, and others. But, in many other ways, the economic consequences have been quite different from those of the 1970s. One obvious difference is what you don't see: drivers lining up on odd or even days to buy gasoline because of price controls or signs at gas stations that say "No gas." And until the recent slowdown--which is more the result of conditions in the residential housing market and in financial markets than of higher oil prices--economic growth was solid and unemployment remained low, unlike what we saw following oil price increases in the '70s.

For a central banker, a particularly critical difference between then and now is what has happened to inflation and inflation expectations. The overall inflation rate has averaged about 3-1/2 percent over the past four quarters, significantly higher than we would like but much less than the double-digit rates that inflation reached in the mid-1970s and then again in 1980. Moreover, the increase in inflation has been milder this time--on the order of 1 percentage point over the past year as compared with the 6 percentage point jump that followed the 1973 oil price shock.4 From the perspective of monetary policy, just as important as the behavior of actual inflation is what households and businesses expect to happen to inflation in the future, particularly over the longer term. If people expect an increase in inflation to be temporary and do not build it into their longer-term plans for setting wages and prices, then the inflation created by a shock to oil prices will tend to fade relatively quickly. Some indicators of longer-term inflation expectations have risen in recent months, which is a significant concern for the Federal Reserve. We will need to monitor that situation closely. However, changes in long-term inflation expectations have been measured in tenths of a percentage point this time around rather than in whole percentage points, as appeared to be the case in the mid-1970s. Importantly, we see little indication today of the beginnings of a 1970s-style wage-price spiral, in which wages and prices chased each other ever upward.

A good deal of economic research has looked at the question of why the inflation response to the oil shock has been relatively muted in the current instance.5 One factor, which illustrates my point about the adaptability and flexibility of the U.S. economy, is the pronounced decline in the energy intensity of the economy since the 1970s. Since 1975, the energy required to produce a given amount of output in the United States has fallen by about half.6 This great improvement in energy efficiency was less the result of government programs than of steps taken by households and businesses in response to higher energy prices, including substantial investments in more energy-efficient equipment and means of transportation. This improvement in energy efficiency is one of the reasons why a given increase in crude oil prices does less damage to the U.S. economy today than it did in the 1970s.

Another reason is the performance of monetary policy. The Federal Reserve and other central banks have learned the lessons of the 1970s. Because monetary policy works with a lag, the short-term inflationary effects of a sharp increase in oil prices can generally not be fully offset. However, since Paul Volcker's time, the Federal Reserve has been firmly committed to maintaining a low and stable rate of inflation over the longer term. And we recognize that keeping longer-term inflation expectations well anchored is essential to achieving the goal of low and stable inflation. Maintaining confidence in the Fed's commitment to price stability remains a top priority as the central bank navigates the current complex situation.

Although our economy has thus far dealt with the current oil price shock comparatively well, the United States and the rest of the world still face significant challenges in dealing with the rising global demand for energy, especially if continued demand growth and constrained supplies maintain intense pressure on prices. The silver lining of high energy prices is that they provide a powerful incentive for action--for conservation, including investment in energy-saving technologies; for the investment needed to bring new oil supplies to market; and for the development of alternative conventional and nonconventional energy sources. The government, in addition to the market, can usefully address energy concerns, for example, by supporting basic research and adopting well-designed regulatory policies to promote important social objectives such as protecting the environment. As we saw after the oil price shock of the 1970s, given some time, the economy can become much more energy-efficient even as it continues to grow and living standards improve.

Let me turn now to the other economic challenge that I want to highlight today--the productivity performance of our economy. At this point you may be saying to yourself, "Is it too late to book Ali G?" However, anyone who stayed awake through EC 10 understands why this issue is so important.7 As Adam Smith pointed out in 1776, in the long run, more than any other factor, the productivity of the workforce determines a nation's standard of living.

The decades following the end of World War II were remarkable for their industrial innovation and creativity. From 1948 to 1973, output per hour of work grew by nearly 3 percent per year, on average.8 But then, for the next 20 years or so, productivity growth averaged only about 1-1/2 percent per year, barely half its previous rate. Predictably, the rate of increase in the standard of living slowed as well, and to about the same extent. The difference between 3 percent and 1-1/2 percent may sound small. But at 3 percent per year, the standard of living would double about every 23 years, or once every generation; by contrast, at 1-1/2 percent, a doubling would occur only roughly every 47 years, or once every other generation.

Among the many consequences of the productivity slowdown was a further complication for the monetary policy makers of the 1970s. Detecting shifts in economic trends is difficult in real time, and most economists and policymakers did not fully appreciate the extent of the productivity slowdown until the late 1970s. This further influenced the policymakers of the time toward running a monetary policy that was too accommodative. The resulting overheating of the economy probably exacerbated the inflation problem of that decade.9

Productivity growth revived in the mid-1990s, as I mentioned, illustrating once again the resilience of the American economy.10 Since 1995, productivity has increased at about a 2-1/2 percent annual rate. A great deal of intellectual effort has been expended in trying to explain the recent performance and to forecast the future evolution of productivity. Much very good work has been conducted here at Harvard by Dale Jorgenson (my senior thesis adviser in 1975, by the way) and his colleagues, and other important research in the area has been done at the Federal Reserve Board.11 One key finding of that research is that, to have an economic impact, technological innovations must be translated into successful commercial applications. This country's competitive, market-based system, its flexible capital and labor markets, its tradition of entrepreneurship, and its technological strengths--to which Harvard and other universities make a critical contribution--help ensure that that happens on an ongoing basis.

While private-sector initiative was the key ingredient in generating the pickup in productivity growth, government policy was constructive, in part through support of basic research but also to a substantial degree by promoting economic competition. Beginning in the late 1970s, the federal government deregulated a number of key industries, including air travel, trucking, telecommunications, and energy. The resulting increase in competition promoted cost reductions and innovation, leading in turn to new products and industries. It is difficult to imagine that we would have online retailing today if the transportation and telecommunications industries had not been deregulated. In addition, the lowering of trade barriers promoted productivity gains by increasing competition, expanding markets, and increasing the pace of technology transfer.12

Finally, as a central banker, I would be remiss if I failed to mention the contribution of monetary policy to the improved productivity performance. By damping business cycles and by keeping inflation under control, a sound monetary policy improves the ability of households and firms to plan and increases their willingness to undertake the investments in skills, research, and physical capital needed to support continuing gains in productivity.

Just as the productivity slowdown was associated with a slower growth of real per capita income, the productivity resurgence since the mid-1990s has been accompanied by a pickup in real income growth. One measure of average living standards, real consumption per capita, is nearly 35 percent higher today than in 1995. In addition, the flood of innovation that helped spur the productivity resurgence has created many new job opportunities, and more than a few fortunes. But changing technology has also reduced job opportunities for some others--bank tellers and assembly-line workers, for example. And that is the crux of a whole new set of challenges.

Even though average economic well-being has increased considerably over time, the degree of inequality in economic outcomes over the past three decades has increased as well. Economists continue to grapple with the reasons for this trend. But as best we can tell, the increase in inequality probably is due to a number of factors, notably including technological change that seems to have favored higher-skilled workers more than lower-skilled ones. In addition, some economists point to increased international trade and the declining role of labor unions as other, probably lesser contributing factors.

What should we do about rising economic inequality? Answering this question inevitably involves difficult value judgments and tradeoffs. But approaches that inhibit the dynamism of our economy would clearly be a step in the wrong direction. To be sure, new technologies and increased international trade can lead to painful dislocations as some workers lose their jobs or see the demand for their particular skills decline. However, hindering the adoption of new technologies or inhibiting trade flows would do far more harm than good over the longer haul. In the short term, the better approach is to adopt policies that help those who are displaced by economic change. By doing so, we not only provide assistance to those who need it but help to secure public support for the economic flexibility that is essential for prosperity.

In the long term, however, the best way by far to improve economic opportunity and to reduce inequality is to increase the educational attainment and skills of American workers. The productivity surge in the decades after World War II corresponded to a period in which educational attainment was increasing rapidly; in recent decades, progress on that front has been far slower. Moreover, inequalities in education and in access to education remain high. As we think about improving education and skills, we should also look beyond the traditional K-12 and 4-year-college system--as important as it is--to recognize that education should be lifelong and can come in many forms. Early childhood education, community colleges, vocational schools, on-the-job training, online courses, adult education--all of these are vehicles of demonstrated value in increasing skills and lifetime earning power. The use of a wide range of methods to address the pressing problems of inadequate skills and economic inequality would be entirely consistent with the themes of economic adaptability and flexibility that I have emphasized in my remarks.

I will close by shifting from the topic of education in general to your education specifically. Through effort, talent, and doubtless some luck, you have succeeded in acquiring an excellent education. Your education--more precisely, your ability to think critically and creatively--is your greatest asset. And unlike many assets, the more you draw on it, the faster it grows. Put it to good use.

The poor forecasting record of economists is legendary, but I will make a forecast in which I am very confident: Whatever you expect your life and work to be like 10, 20, or 30 years from now, the reality will be quite different. In looking over the 30th anniversary report on my own class, I was struck by the great diversity of vocations and avocations that have engaged my classmates. To be sure, the volume was full of attorneys and physicians and professors as well as architects, engineers, editors, bankers, and even a few economists. Many listed the title "vice president," and, not a few, "president." But the class of 1975 also includes those who listed their occupations as composer, environmental advocate, musician, playwright, rabbi, conflict resolution coach, painter, community organizer, and essayist. And even for those of us with the more conventional job descriptions, the nature of our daily work and its relationship to the economy and society is, I am sure, very different from what we might have guessed in 1975. My point is only that you cannot predict your path. You can only try to be as prepared as possible for the opportunities, as well as the disappointments, that will come your way. For people, as for economies, adaptability and flexibility count for a great deal.

Wherever your path leads, I hope you use your considerable talents and energy in endeavors that engage and excite you and benefit not only yourselves, but also in some measure your country and your world. Today, I wish you and your families a day of joyous celebration. Congratulations.


References
Blanchard, Olivier J., and Jordi Gali (2007). "The Macroeconomic Effects of Oil Shocks: Why Are the 2000s So Different from the 1970s?" Leaving the Board NBER Working Paper 13368. Cambridge, Mass.: National Bureau of Economic Research, September.

Corrado, Carol, and Lawrence Slifman (1999). "Decomposition of Productivity and Unit Costs," Leaving the Board American Economic Review, vol. 89 (May, Papers and Proceedings), pp. 328-32.

Corrado, Carol, Paul Lengermann, J. Joseph Beaulieu, and Eric J. Bartelsman (2007). "Sectoral Productivity in the United States: Recent Developments and the Role of IT," Leaving the Board German Economic Review, vol. 8 (May), pp. 188-210.

Corrado, Carol, Paul Lengermann, and Larry Slifman (2007). "The Contribution of Multinational Corporations to U.S. Productivity Growth, 1977-2000," Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2007-21. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, November.

Doms, Mark E., and J. Bradford Jensen (1998). "Productivity, Skill, and Wage Effects of Multinational Corporations in the United States," in D. Woodward and D. Nigh, eds., Foreign Ownership and the Consequences of Direct Investment in the United States: Beyond Us and Them. Westport, Conn.: Quorum Books, pp. 49-68.

Energy Information Administration (2002). "Petroleum Chronology of Events 1970-2000."

_________ (2008a). "Cushing, OK WTI Spot Price FOB," (accessed May 27, 2008).

_________ (2008b). "Table 1.7: Energy Consumption per Real Dollar of Gross Domestic Product," Monthly Energy Review (May).

Jorgenson, Dale W., Mun S. Ho, and Kevin J. Stiroh (2007). "A Retrospective Look at the U.S. Productivity Growth Resurgence," Staff Report 277. New York: Federal Reserve Bank of New York, February.

Kurz, Christopher J. (2006). "Outstanding Outsourcers: A Firm- and Plant-Level Analysis of Production Sharing," Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2006-04. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, March.

Oliner, Stephen D., Daniel E. Sichel, and Kevin J. Stiroh (2007). "Explaining a Productive Decade," Leaving the Board Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, vol. 2007 (no. 1), pp. 81-152.

Orphanides, Athanasios (2003). "The Quest for Prosperity Without Inflation," Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 50 (April), pp. 633-63.

Footnotes

1. Inflation is calculated as the percent change from four quarters earlier in the price index for personal consumption expenditures (PCE), published by the U.S. Department of Commerce.

2. See Energy Information Administration (2002).

3. See Energy Information Administration (2008a).

4. Total PCE inflation (four-quarter change) went from 5 percent in 1973:Q2 to 11.4 percent in 1974:Q4, an increase of 6.4 percentage points. If we take 1972:Q4, in which inflation was 3.4 percent, as the starting point, the increase in inflation to the 1974 peak was 8 percentage points.

5. See, for example, Blanchard and Gali (2007) and the references therein.

6. In 1975, roughly 17,000 Btu of energy were required, on average, to produce a dollar's worth of output, with output being measured in chained (2000) dollars. In 2007 the corresponding figure was 8,800 Btu (see Table 1.7, "Energy Consumption per Real Dollar of Gross Domestic Product," in Energy Information Administration, 2008b).

7. EC 10 is Harvard's introductory course in principles of economics.

8. Output per hour worked reflects data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics for the private nonfarm business sector.

9. See Orphanides (2003).

10. One of the earlier papers that was used by many observers to suggest the possibility of a mid-1990s inflection point in productivity growth was Corrado and Slifman (1999). The initial version of this paper was posted on the Federal Reserve's web site on November 18, 1996.

11. Some of the important papers include Oliner, Sichel, and Stiroh (2007), Jorgenson, Ho, and Stiroh (2007), and Corrado and others (2007).

12. For example, see Doms and Jensen (1998), Corrado, Lengermann, and Slifman (2007), and Kurz (2006).

[관련키워드]

[뉴스핌 베스트 기사]

사진
'왕과 사는 남자' 800만 돌파 [서울=뉴스핌]이웅희 기자=영화 '왕과 사는 남자'가 누적 800만 관객을 돌파했다. 감독과 배우들의 친필 감사 메시지도 공개했다.  1457년 청령포, 마을의 부흥을 위해 유배지를 자처한 촌장과 왕위에서 쫓겨나 유배된 어린 선왕의 이야기를 담은 영화 '왕과 사는 남자'가 누적 관객수 800만 명을 돌파하며, 2026년 최고 흥행작의 위상을 공고히 했다. 영화관입장권 통합전산망에 따르면 '왕과 사는 남자'는 개봉 26일째인 3월 1일 기준 누적 관객수 8,006,326명을 기록했다. 관객들을 중심으로 확산된 뜨거운 입소문과 쉽게 가시지 않는 영화의 여운으로 인한 N차 관람 열풍에 힘입은 결과로 의미를 더하고 있다. 또한 800만 관객 돌파를 맞아 <왕과 사는 남자>의 장항준 감독은 "<왕과 사는 남자>를 사랑해 주신 관객분들께 너무나 감사하다. 800만 관객이 영화를 봐주셨는데, 나뿐만 아니라 제작진들과 배우들도 다들 상상해 본 적이 없는 숫자라는 생각을 한다. 모두가 하루하루 감사한 마음으로 지내고 있다"며 흥행에 대한 벅찬 소감을 전했다. 배우들 역시 친필 감사 메시지를 공개했다. 광천골 촌장 엄흥도 역의 유해진은 "생각지도 못한 큰 사랑. 진심으로 감사드립니다! 건강하세요^^", 어린 선왕 이홍위 역의 박지훈은 "여러분들께서 사랑해주셔서 영화 <왕과 사는 남자>가 800만을 달성했습니다! 정말 감사합니다! 언제나 늘 열심히 하겠습니다♡ 행복하세요!" , 권력자 한명회 역의 유지태는 "내 인생에 800만 영화를 함께했다는 것만으로 이미 성공한 배우입니다. 진심으로 감사드립니다", 궁녀 매화 역의 전미도는 "<왕과 사는 남자> 800만!! 오랜만에 극장을 찾아와주신 어르신분들, 부모님 모시고 N차 관람해주신 자녀분들, 엄흥도와 단종의 이야기에 함께 가슴 아파해주신 모든 분들께 진심으로 감사드립니다", 흥도의 아들 태산 역의 김민은 "<왕과 사는 남자>를 사랑해주시는 여러분들 정말 감사합니다. 덕분에 행복한 시절을 보내고 있습니다. 늘 건강하고 행복하세요♡"라며 800만 관객을 달성한 기쁜 마음을 전했다. 또 영월군수 역의 박지환은 "<왕과 사는 남자> 800만 관객 여러분 감사드립니다. 앞으로 더욱 열심히 최선을 다하겠습니다", 금성대군 역의 이준혁은 "<왕과 사는 남자> 800만 돌파! 진심으로 감사합니다", 노루골 촌장 역의 안재홍은 "<왕과 사는 남자> 800만 관객 여러분 감사합니다! 사랑합니다!"라며 감사의 인사를 전했다. 몰입감을 극대화하는 배우들의 눈부신 열연과 모두가 알고 있는 역사 속 아무도 몰랐던 단종의 숨겨진 이야기로 가슴 깊은 여운을 전하는 '왕과 사는 남자'의 흥행 질주를 당분간 이어갈 전망이다. iaspire@newspim.com 2026-03-01 15:17
사진
CIA는 모든 걸 알고 있었다 [런던=뉴스핌] 장일현 특파원 = 미국과 이스라엘은 누구도 예상하지 못한 대낮 공습을 감행해 이란의 최고지도자 아야톨라 알리 하메네이를 제거했다.  통상 이 같은 대규모 군사작전은 한밤중 또는 새벽에 시작되는데 이날 공습은 오전 9시40분쯤 실행됐다.  미국 언론들은 이 같은 공습 시기 결정과 관련해 미국과 이스라엘이 하메네이를 비롯한 이란의 군 최고 수뇌부가 이날 오전에 테헤란에 모여 회의를 열 것이라는 정보를 완벽하게 파악했기 때문이라고 했다.  수십년 동안 "미국에게 죽음을"이라는 구호를 외쳐온 이란의 최고 지휘부를 일거에 제거할 수 있는 절호의 기회를 포착한 것이다.  [사진=로이터 뉴스핌] 아야톨라 알리 하메네이(왼쪽) 전 이란 최고지도자가 지난해 6월 4일(현지 시간) 테헤란 남부 호메이니 기념관에서 열린 행사에서 이슬람 혁명의 아버지 아야톨라 루홀라 호메이니 전 이란 최고지도자의 손자인 하산 호메이니와 함께 대중을 향해 인사하고 있다. [사진=로이터 뉴스핌] 미 일간 뉴욕타임스(NYT)는 1일(현지 시간) "미 중앙정보국(CIA)이 이란 지도자들의 모임 장소를 정확히 파악하는데 도움을 줬고, 이후 이스라엘이 공격을 실행했다"고 보도했다.  보도에 따르면 CIA는 지난 몇 개월 동안 하메네이의 움직임을 지속적으로 추적해 왔다. 그 결과 그의 행적과 동선에 대해 점점 더 확신을 갖게 됐다고 한다.  그러던 중 CIA는 하메네이가 지난 28일 아침 테헤란 중심부에 있는 이란 정부 청사 단지에서 주요 군 지휘관들과 회의를 한다는 정보를 입수했다.  미국과 이스라엘은 긴급하게 움직였다. 이 기회를 놓치지 않기 위해 공격 시기를 조율했다.  CIA는 '신뢰도가 높은' 하메네이의 동선과 위치에 대한 정보를 이스라엘에 넘겼다고 이 사안에 정통한 소식통들이 NYT에 밝혔다.  이스라엘의 전투기들은 28일 오전 6시쯤 공군기지에서 이륙했다. 이어 오전 9시40분쯤 이 전투기들이 발사한 장거리 공대지 미사일이 테헤란 시내 주요 목표물을 타격했다.  이스라엘 국방부 관계자는 "오늘 아침 공습은 테헤란의 여러 곳에서 동시에 이뤄졌으며, 그 중 한 곳에 이란의 정치·안보 고위 인사들이 모여 있었다"고 했다.  NYT는 "하메네이의 제거는 작년 6월 '12일 전쟁' 이후 미국과 이스라엘이 이란 지도부에 대해 축적해 온 심층적인 정보력을 반영한 것"이라고 진단했다.  이날 공습으로 하메네이 이외에도 아지즈 나시르자데 국방장관과 압둘라힘 무사비 이란군 참모총장, 모하마드 파크푸르 이란혁명수비대 사령관, 알리 삼카니 최고지도자 군사고문 및 국방위원회 위원장 등도 폭사했다. 이란의 군 수뇌부가 한꺼번에 사라진 것이다.  미국은 이번 군사작전을 '장대한 분노(Operation Epic Fury)'라고 했고, 이스라엘은 '포효하는 사자(Operation Roaring Lion)'라고 부르고 있다.  ihjang67@newspim.com   2026-03-01 19:48
기사 번역
결과물 출력을 준비하고 있어요.
종목 추적기

S&P 500 기업 중 기사 내용이 영향을 줄 종목 추적

결과물 출력을 준비하고 있어요.

긍정 영향 종목

  • Lockheed Martin Corp. Industrials
    우크라이나 안보 지원 강화 기대감으로 방산 수요 증가 직접적. 미·러 긴장 완화 불확실성 속에서도 방위산업 매출 안정성 강화 예상됨.

부정 영향 종목

  • Caterpillar Inc. Industrials
    우크라이나 전쟁 장기화 시 건설 및 중장비 수요 불확실성 직접적. 글로벌 인프라 투자 지연으로 매출 성장 둔화 가능성 있음.
이 내용에 포함된 데이터와 의견은 뉴스핌 AI가 분석한 결과입니다. 정보 제공 목적으로만 작성되었으며, 특정 종목 매매를 권유하지 않습니다. 투자 판단 및 결과에 대한 책임은 투자자 본인에게 있습니다. 주식 투자는 원금 손실 가능성이 있으므로, 투자 전 충분한 조사와 전문가 상담을 권장합니다.
안다쇼핑
Top으로 이동