But Bernanke warned that government spending cuts continue to threaten growth and that tapering the big bond-purchase program is "by no means" a "preset course".
In prepared testimony to Congress, Bernanke stressed that the end to the USD 85 billion-a-month quantitative easing (QE) program did not mean the Fed was ready to begin tightening monetary policy with interest-rate hikes.
With unemployment still high and falling slowly and inflation very low, he said, "a highly accommodative monetary policy will remain appropriate for the foreseeable future."
But, addressing the jump in bond yields that answered that plan, he doubled up his message that the stimulus taper did not mean the Fed was ready to tighten its ultra-low interest rates.
And he stressed that growth remained vulnerable, and that QE would remain in place if needed, or even expanded.
Indeed, he said, if inflation -- which the Fed wants to see at 2 percent -- stays much lower than that, and the jobless rate does not fall quickly enough from its current 7.6 percent level, bond purchases could be held at the current level or even increased if necessary.
The Fed has wrestled with an outsized jump in yields and market interest rates, by more than one percentage point, in the weeks since its path towards reeling in the stimulus became apparent in May.
The surge in rates, economists worry, could itself slow the recovery by slowing demand in the recovering housing sector, which has become a key contributor to growth.
Bernanke said the federal funds rate, now at 0-0.25 percent, would stay low "at least as long as" unemployment remains above 6.5 percent and inflation remains tame at 2 percent or below.
He stressed that even those numbers "are thresholds, not triggers" that would prod the FOMC to weigh changes to monetary policy, and not automatically result in a rate hike.
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