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※ 번역할 언어 선택

Chairman Ben S. Bernanke
At the 32nd Annual Economic Policy Conference, Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis(via videoconference)
October 19, 2007

Monetary Policy under Uncertainty

Bill Poole's career in the Federal Reserve System spans two decades separated by a quarter of a century. From 1964 to 1974 Bill was an economist on the staff of the Board's Division of Research and Statistics. He then left to join the economics faculty at Brown University, where he stayed for nearly twenty-five years. Bill rejoined the Fed in 1998 as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, so he is now approaching the completion of his second decade in the System.

As it happens, each of Bill's two decades in the System was a time of considerable research and analysis on the issue of how economic uncertainty affects the making of monetary policy, a topic on which Bill has written and spoken many times. I would like to compare the state of knowledge on this topic during Bill's first decade in the System with what we have learned during his most recent decade of service. The exercise is interesting in its own right and has the added benefit of giving me the opportunity to highlight Bill's seminal contributions in this line of research.

Developments during the First Period: 1964-74
In 1964, when Bill began his first stint in the Federal Reserve System, policymakers and researchers were becoming increasingly confident in the ability of monetary and fiscal policy to smooth the business cycle. From the traditional Keynesian perspective, which was the dominant viewpoint of the time, monetary policy faced a long-term tradeoff between inflation and unemployment that it could exploit to keep unemployment low over an indefinitely long period at an acceptable cost in terms of inflation. Moreover, improvements in econometric modeling and the importation of optimal-control methods from engineering were seen as having the potential to tame the business cycle.

Of course, the prevailing optimism had its dissenters, notably Milton Friedman. Friedman believed that the inherent complexity of the economy, the long and variable lags with which monetary policy operates, and the political and bureaucratic influences on central bank decisionmaking precluded policy from fine tuning the level of economic activity. Friedman advocated the use of simple prescriptions for monetary policy--such as the k percent money growth rule--which he felt would work reasonably well on average while avoiding the pitfalls of attempting to fine-tune the economy in the face of pervasive uncertainty (Friedman, 1968).

Other economists were more optimistic than Friedman about the potential benefits of activist policies. Nevertheless, they recognized that the fundamental economic uncertainties faced by policymakers are a first-order problem and that improving the conduct of policy would require facing that problem head on. During this decade, those researchers as well as sympathetic policymakers focused especially on three areas of economic uncertainty: the current state of the economy, the structure of the economy (including the transmission mechanism of monetary policy), and the way in which private agents form expectations about future economic developments and policy actions.

Uncertainty about the current state of the economy is a chronic problem for policymakers. At best, official data represent incomplete snapshots of various aspects of the economy, and even then they may be released with a substantial lag and be revised later. Apart from issues of measurement, policymakers face enormous challenges in determining the sources of variation in the data. For example, a given change in output could be the result of a change in aggregate demand, in aggregate supply, or in some combination of the two.

As most of my listeners know, Bill Poole tackled these issues in a landmark 1970 paper, which examined how uncertainty about the state of the economy affects the choice of the operating instrument for monetary policy (Poole, 1970). In the simplest version of his model, Bill assumed that the central bank could choose to specify its monetary policy actions in terms of a particular level of a monetary aggregate or a particular value of a short-term nominal interest rate. If the central bank has only partial information about disturbances to money demand and to aggregate demand, Bill showed that the optimal choice of policy instrument depends on the relative variances of the two types of shocks. In particular, using the interest rate as the policy instrument is the better choice when aggregate demand is relatively stable but money demand is unstable, with money growth being the preferable policy instrument in the opposite case.

Bill was also a pioneer in formulating simple feedback rules that established a middle ground between the mechanical approach advocated by Friedman and the highly complex prescriptions of optimal-control methods. For example, Bill wrote a Federal Reserve staff paper titled "Rules-of-Thumb for Guiding Monetary Policy" (Poole, 1971). Because his econometric analysis of the available data indicated that money demand was more stable than aggregate demand, Bill formulated a simple rule that adjusted the money growth rate in response to the observed unemployment rate. Bill was also practical in noting the pitfalls of mechanical adherence to any particular policy rule; in this study, for example, he emphasized that the proposed rule was not intended "to be followed to the last decimal place or as one that is good for all time [but] . . . as a guide--or as a benchmark--against which current policy may be judged" (p. 152).

Uncertainty about the structure of the economy also received attention during that decade. For example, in his elegant 1967 paper, Bill Brainard showed that uncertainty about the effect of policy on the economy may imply that policy should respond more cautiously to shocks than would be the case if this uncertainty did not exist. Brainard's analysis has often been cited as providing a theoretical basis for the gradual adjustment of policy rates of most central banks. Alan Blinder has written that the Brainard result was "never far from my mind when I occupied the Vice Chairman's office at the Federal Reserve. In my view, . . . a little stodginess at the central bank is entirely appropriate" (Blinder, 1998, p. 12).

A key source of uncertainty became evident in the late 1960s and 1970s as a result of highly contentious debates about the formation of expectations by households and firms. Friedman (1968) and Ned Phelps (1969) were the first to highlight the central importance of expectations formation, arguing that the private sector's expectations adjust in response to monetary policy and therefore preclude any long-run tradeoff between unemployment and inflation. However, Friedman and Phelps retained the view that monetary policy could exert substantial effects on the real economy over the short to medium run. In contrast, Robert Lucas and others reached more dramatic conclusions, arguing that only unpredictable movements in monetary policy can affect the real economy and concluding that policy has no capacity to smooth the business cycle (Lucas, 1972; Sargent and Wallace, 1975). Although these studies highlighted the centrality of inflation expectations for the analysis of monetary policy, the profession did not succeed in reaching any consensus about how those expectations evolve, especially in an environment of ongoing structural change.

Developments during the Second Period: 1998-2007
Research during the past ten years has been very fruitful in expanding the profession's understanding of the implications of uncertainty for the design and conduct of monetary policy.

On the issue of uncertainty about the state of the economy, Bill's work continues to provide fundamental insights regarding the choice of policy instrument. Money demand relationships were relatively stable through the 1950s and 1960s, but, in the wake of dramatic innovations in banking and financial markets, short-term money-demand relationships became less predictable, at least in the United States. As a result, consistent with the policy implication of Bill's 1970 model, the Federal Reserve (like most other central banks) today uses the overnight interbank rate as the principal operating target of monetary policy. Bill's research also raised the possibility of specifying the operating target in other ways, for example, as an index of monetary or financial conditions; and it provided a framework for evaluating the usefulness of intermediate targets--such as core inflation or the growth of broad money--that are only indirectly controlled by policy.

More generally, the task of assessing the current state of the economy remains a formidable challenge. Indeed, our appreciation of that challenge has been enhanced by recent research using real time data sets.1 For example, Athanasios Orphanides has shown that making such real-time assessments of the sustainable levels of economic activity and employment is considerably more difficult than estimating those levels retrospectively. His 2002 study of U.S. monetary policy in the 1970s shows how mismeasurement of the sustainable level of economic activity can lead to serious policy mistakes.

On a more positive note, economists have made substantial progress over the past decade in developing new econometric methods for summarizing the information about the current state of the economy contained in a wide array of economic and financial market indicators (Svensson and Woodford, 2003). Dynamic-factor models, for example, provide a systematic approach to extracting information from real-time data at very high frequencies. These approaches have the potential to usefully supplement more informal observation and human judgment (Stock and Watson, 2002; Bernanke and Boivin, 2003; and Giannone, Reichlin, and Small, 2005).

The past decade has also witnessed significant progress in analyzing the policy implications of uncertainty regarding the structure of the economy. New work addresses not only uncertainty about the values of specific parameters in a given model of the economy but also uncertainty about which of several competing models provides the best description of reality. Some research has attacked those problems using Bayesian optimal-control methods (Brock, Durlauf, and West, 2003). The approach requires the specification of an explicit objective function as well as of the investigator's prior probabilities over the set of plausible models and parameter values. The Bayesian approach provides a useful benchmark for policy in an environment of well-defined sources of uncertainty about the structure of the economy, and the resulting policy prescriptions give relatively greater weight to outcomes that have a higher probability of being realized. In contrast, other researchers, such as Lars Hansen and Thomas Sargent, have developed robust-control methods--adapted from the engineering literature--that are aimed at minimizing the consequences of worst-case scenarios, including those with only a low probability of being realized (Hansen and Sargent, 2007).

An important practical implication of all this recent literature is that Brainard's attenuation principle may not always hold. For example, when the degree of structural inertia in the inflation process is uncertain, the optimal Bayesian policy tends to involve a more pronounced response to shocks than would be the case in the absence of uncertainty (Söderstrom, 2002). The concern about worst-case scenarios emphasized by the robust-control approach may likewise lead to amplification rather than attenuation in the response of the optimal policy to shocks (Giannoni, 2002; Onatski and Stock, 2002; and Tetlow and von zur Muehlen, 2002). Indeed, intuition suggests that stronger action by the central bank may be warranted to prevent particularly costly outcomes.

Although Bayesian and robust-control methods provide insights into the nature of optimal policy, the corresponding policy recommendations can be complex and sensitive to the set of economic models being considered. A promising alternative approach--reminiscent of the work that Bill Poole did in the 1960s--focuses on simple policy rules, such as the one proposed by John Taylor, and compares the performance of alternative rules across a range of possible models and sets of parameter values (Levin, Wieland, and Williams, 1999 and 2003). That approach is motivated by the notion that the perfect should not be the enemy of the good; rather than trying to find policies that are optimal in the context of specific models, the central bank may be better served by adopting simple and predictable policies that produce reasonably good results in a variety of circumstances.

Given the centrality of inflation expectations for the design of monetary policy, a key development over the past decade has been the burgeoning literature on the formation of these expectations in the absence of full knowledge of the underlying structure of the economy.2 For example, considerations of how the public learns about the economy and the objectives of the central bank can affect the form of the optimal monetary policy (Gaspar, Smets, and Vestin, 2006; Orphanides and Williams, 2007). Furthermore, when the public is unsure about the central bank's objectives, even greater benefits may accompany achieving a stable inflation rate, as doing so may help anchor the public's inflation expectations. These studies also show why central bank communications is a key component of monetary policy; in a world of uncertainty, informing the public about the central bank's objectives, plans, and outlook can affect behavior and macroeconomic outcomes (Bernanke, 2004; and Orphanides and Williams, 2005).

Conclusion
Uncertainty--about the state of the economy, the economy's structure, and the inferences that the public will draw from policy actions or economic developments--is a pervasive feature of monetary policy making. The contributions of Bill Poole have helped refine our understanding of how to conduct policy in an uncertain environment. Notably, we now appreciate that policy decisions under uncertainty must take into account a range of possible scenarios about the state or structure of the economy, and those policy decisions may look quite different from those that would be optimal under certainty. For example, policy actions may be attenuated or augmented relative to the "no-uncertainty benchmark," depending on one's judgments about the possible outcomes and the costs associated with those outcomes. The fact that the public is uncertain about and must learn about the economy and policy provides a reason for the central bank to strive for predictability and transparency, avoid overreacting to current economic information, and recognize the challenges of making real-time assessments of the sustainable level of real economic activity and employment. Most fundamentally, our discussions of the pervasive uncertainty that we face as policymakers is a powerful reminder of the need for humility about our ability to forecast and manage the future course of the economy.

References
Bernanke, Ben S. (2004). "Fedspeak," speech delivered at the Meetings of the American Economic Association, San Diego, January 3, www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2004/200401032/default.htm.

_________ (2007). "Inflation Expectations and Inflation Forecasting," speech delivered at the Monetary Economics Workshop of the National Bureau of Economic Research Summer Institute, Cambridge, Mass., July 10, www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/speech/bernanke20070710a.htm.

Bernanke, Ben S., and Jean Boivin (2003). "Monetary Policy in a Data-Rich Environment," Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 50 (April), pp. 525-46.

Blinder, Alan S. (1998). Central Banking in Theory and Practice. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.

Brainard, William C. (1967). "Uncertainty and the Effectiveness of Policy," American Economic Review, vol. 57 (May, Papers and Proceedings), pp. 411-25.

Brock, William A., Steven N. Durlauf, and Kenneth D. West (2003). "Policy Analysis in Uncertain Economic Environments," Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, vol. 2003 (no. 1), pp. 235-322.

Faust, Jon, and Jonathan H. Wright (2007). "Comparing Greenbook and Reduced Form Forecasts Using a Large Realtime Dataset (259 KB PDF)," paper presented at "Real-Time Data Analysis and Methods in Economics," a conference held at the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia, April 19-20, www.phil.frb.org/econ/conf/rtconference2007/papers/Paper-Wright.pdf.

Friedman, Milton (1968). "The Role of Monetary Policy." American Economic Review, vol. 58 (March), pp. 1-17.

Gaspar, Vitor, Frank Smets, and David Vestin (2006). "Adaptive Learning, Persistence, and Optimal Monetary Policy," Leaving the BoardJ ournal of the European Economic Association, vol. 4 (April-May), pp. 376-85.

Giannone, Domenico, Lucrezia Reichlin, and David Small (2005). "Nowcasting GDP and Inflation: The Real-Time Informational Content of Macroeconomic Data Releases," Finance and Economics Discussion Series 2005-42. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, October, www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/feds/2005.

Giannoni, Marc P. (2002). "Does Model Uncertainty Justify Caution? Robust Optimal Monetary Policy in a Forward-Looking Model," Leaving the Board Macroeconomic Dynamics, vol. 6 (February), pp. 111-44.

Hansen, Lars Peter, and Thomas J. Sargent (2007). Robustness. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Levin, Andrew, Volker Wieland, and John Williams (1999). "Robustness of Simple Monetary Policy Rules under Model Uncertainty," in Taylor, John, ed., Monetary Policy Rules. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, pp. 263-99.

_________ (2003). "The Performance of Forecast-Based Monetary Policy Rules under Model Uncertainty," Leaving the Board American Economic Review, vol. 93 (June), pp. 622-45.

Lucas, Robert E., Jr. (1972). "Expectations and the Neutrality of Money," Leaving the Board Journal of Economic Theory, vol. 4 (June), pp.103-24.

Onatski, Alexei, and James H. Stock (2002). "Robust Monetary Policy under Model Uncertainty in a Small Model of the U.S. Economy," Leaving the Board Macroeconomic Dynamics, vol. 6 (March), pp. 85-110.

Orphanides, Athanasios (2002). "Monetary-Policy Rules and the Great Inflation," Leaving the Board American Economic Review, vol. 92 (May, Papers and Proceedings), pp. 115-20.

Orphanides, Athanasios, and John C. Williams (2005). "Inflation Scares and Forecast-based Monetary Policy," Leaving the Board Review of Economic Dynamics, vol. 8 (April), pp. 498-527.

_________ (2007). "Robust Monetary Policy with Imperfect Knowledge," Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 54 (July), pp. 1406-35.

Phelps, Edmund S. (1969). "The New Microeconomics in Inflation and Employment Theory," American Economic Review, vol. 59 (May, Papers and Proceedings), pp. 147-60.

Poole, William (1970). "Optimal Choice of Monetary Policy Instruments in a Simple Stochastic Macro Model," Leaving the Board Quarterly Journal of Economics, vol. 84 (May), pp. 197-216.

_________ (1971). "Rules-of-Thumb for Guiding Monetary Policy," in Open Market Policies and Operating Procedures--Staff Studies. Washington: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, pp. 135-89.

Sargent, Thomas J., and Neil Wallace (1975). "'Rational' Expectations, the Optimal Monetary Instrument, and the Optimal Money Supply Rule," Leaving the Board Journal of Political Economy, vol. 83 (April), pp. 241-54.

Söderstrom, Ulf (2002). "Monetary Policy with Uncertain Parameters," Leaving the Board Scandinavian Journal of Economics, vol. 104 (February), pp. 125-45.

Stock, James, and Mark Watson (2002). "Forecasting Using Principal Components from a Large Number of Predictors," Leaving the Board Journal of the American Statistical Association, vol. 97 (December), pp. 1167-79.

Svensson, Lars E.O., and Michael Woodford (2003). "Indicator Variables for Optimal Policy," Leaving the Board Journal of Monetary Economics, vol. 50 (April), pp. 691-720.

Tetlow, Robert, and Peter von zur Muehlen (2001). "Robust Monetary Policy with Misspecified Models: Does Model Uncertainty Always Call for Attenuated Policy?" Leaving the Board Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, vol. 25 (June), pp. 911-49.

Footnotes

1. A recent example is Faust and Wright (2007).

2. Bernanke (2007) and the references therein.

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[뉴스핌 베스트 기사]

사진
버넘 의원, 英 집권 노동당 새 대표로 [런던=뉴스핌] 장일현 특파원 = '북부의 왕'으로 불리는 앤디 버넘 의원이 17일(현지 시각) 영국 집권 여당인 노동당의 새 대표에 올랐다.  버넘 대표는 오는 20일 키어 스타머 총리를 이어 영국의 차기 총리 자리를 확정했다. 의원내각제를 채택하고 있는 영국은 의회 다수를 차지하고 있는 집권당의 대표가 총리가 된다. 노동당은 이날 특별 당대회를 열고 버넘 의원을 당 대표로 공식 선출했다. 버넘은 전날 마감된 당 대표 경선 후보 등록에서 단독으로 등록했다. 영국 일간 가디언은 "노동당 공보에 따르면 버넘은 노동당 소속 하원의원 379명과 노동조합·사회주의 단체 23곳의 지지를 받아 당 대표로 선출됐다"고 했다. 현재 노동당은 전체 의석 650석 중 403석을 보유하고 있는데 이중 94%가 버넘을 당 대표로 선택한 것이다.  앤디 버넘 영국 노동당 새 대표가 17일(현지 시각) 특별 당대화에서 대표 수락 연설을 하고 있다. [사진=로이터 뉴스핌] 샤바나 마무드 내무장관의 새 대표 선출 결과 발표와 함께 무대에 오른 버넘은 일성으로 "국민에게 희망을 되돌려주겠다"고 했다.  그는 "저를 지지한 노동당 의원들이 모두 영국 곳곳의 잊혀진 지역을 위해 과거의 노동당을 되찾아 달라는 요구를 들었다"면서 "우리는 그 부름에 응답할 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "우리는 오늘 하나로 뭉쳤고, 그 힘을 오랫동안 정치로부터 희망을 잃은 사람들과 지역을 위해 사용할 것"이라고 했다.  그는 이날 연설에서 다섯 가지 변화와 약속을 실천하겠다고 했다. 노당동의 단결을 위해 '파벌 문화'를 종식하겠다고 했고, "이번이 바뀔 수 있는 마지막 기회"라면서 비난보다 문제 해결의 정치를 추구하겠다고 했다. 그는 "영국 정치가 덜 독해졌으면 좋겠다"고도 했다.  세번째 변화로는 노동당의 정치적 지향을 거론하며 노동당답게 승리할 것이라고 했다. 그는 "녹색당보다 더 녹색당처럼 행동하려 하지도 않을 것이고, 영국개혁당(Reform UK)보다 더 개혁당처럼 행동하려 하지 않을 것이며 과거처럼 보수당 옷을 너무 많이 입지도 않을 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "담대하고 자신감 있게, 진정한 노동당으로 승리할 것"이라고 했다.  이어 "북부와 남부, 동부와 서부, 스코틀랜드와 웨일스, 북아일랜드 모두를 위한 지도자가 되겠다"는 것이 네 번째 약속이고, 중앙정부가 독접하고 있는 권한을 웨스트민스터와 화이트홀에서 지역 사회로 되돌려주는 지방분권이 다섯 번째 약속이라고 했다.  버넘 대표는 자신이 친기업 노선을 취할 것이라고도 했다. 그는 "그레이터맨체스터 시장 시절 친기업적인 시장이었듯이 노동당 대표가 된 뒤에도 친기업적인 지도자가 될 것"이라며 "우리는 기업과 함께 지역을 되살렸고 그 방식을 영국 전체로 확대할 것"이라고 했다.  1970년 1월 리버풀 북쪽 교외 지역에서 태어난 그는 15세 때 노동당에 가입했다. 케임브리지대에서 영어를 전공한 뒤 의원 보좌관 등을 거쳐 2001년 총선에서 그레이터맨체스트의 리(Leigh) 선거구에서 하원의원에 당선됐다. 이후 16년간 하원의원을 지냈다.  이 기간 토니 블레어와 고든 브라운 정부에서 내무부·재무부 차관, 문화장관, 보건장관 등을 역임했다.  2010년과 2015년에 당 대표에 도전했지만 에드 밀리밴드와 제러미 코빈에서 패했다.  2017년 중앙정치를 떠나 새로 만들어진 그레이터맨체스터 광역시장 선거에 출마해 당선됐고, 2021년과 2024년 선거에서도 내리 승리했다.  시장으로 재직하면서 버스 공영화를 추진하고 통합 대중교통망 구축과 주택 공급 확대 등으로 시민들의 지지를 받았다. 특히 코로나19 팬데믹 당시 중앙 정부에 맞서 북부 지역 지원 확대를 요구하면서 전국적인 인지도를 얻었다. 이때부터 '북부의 왕(King of the North)'이라는 별명이 널리 퍼졌다. 버넘 시장 재임 시절 그레이터맨체스터는 전국 평균을 상회하는 경제성장률을 기록했다.  버넘 대표는 당 대회 연설에 앞서 소셜미디어에 "앞으로 며칠은 영국을 누가 통치하느냐만 바꾸는 것이 아니며 영국이 어떻게 통치되는지를 바꾸는 것"이라고 했다. 그러면서 "권력을 있어야 할 곳으로 되돌릴 기회"라고 했다.  그는 정치적으로는 현 스타머 총리보다 더욱 왼쪽에 있는 것으로 평가되고 있다. 주택과 교통, 교육 등과 관련된 권한을 지방으로 분산해 각 지역에 맞는 경제 발전을 추구해야 한다는 내용의 '맨체스터리즘'(Manchesterism)을 주장한다.  맨체스터에 제2 총리실을 둬 중앙정부와 효율적으로 업무를 조율하는 '북부 총리실(No. 10 North)' 구상도 밝혔다.  ihjang67@newspim.com   2026-07-17 23:06
사진
신진서, AI카타고에 제1국 불계패 [서울=뉴스핌] 박상욱 기자 = 두 점을 먼저 놓고 시작했어도 인공지능(AI)의 벽은 높았다. 세계 최강 신진서 9단이 바둑 AI 카타고(KataGo)와의 첫 맞대결에서 아쉬운 역전패를 당했다. 신진서는 17일 서울 중구 한국경제TV 스튜디오에서 열린 카타고와의 '쎈수학·한경 기신전' 3번기 제1국에서 4시간 20분의 혈투 끝에 245수 만에 흑 불계패했다. 이번 대국은 2016년 이세돌과 알파고의 대결 이후 10년 만에 성사된 인간과 AI의 맞대결로 큰 관심을 모았다. 비약적으로 발전한 AI의 기력을 고려해 이번에는 신진서가 2점을 먼저 까는 접바둑으로 진행됐다. 카타고는 첫 수부터 흔들기에 나섰다. 좌상귀 화점에 첫 수를 놓는 변칙수로 신진서의 초반 포석 구상을 깨뜨렸다. 이어 우상귀 쪽에도 높은 걸침 수를 두며 변칙 전술을 이어갔다. 신진서는 전투를 피하고 잔잔하게 국면을 이끌며 중반까지 우세를 유지했다. [AI 챗GPT가 제작한 AI '카타고(KataGo)'와 신진서 9단 기신전(棋神戰) 3번기 일러스트] psoq1337@newspim.com 100수를 넘어서면서 승부처가 나왔다. 미세하게 격차가 좁혀지자 신진서는 백 대마를 잡기 위해 중앙에 승부수를 던졌다. 사람을 상대로는 충분히 통할 수 있는 강력한 공격이었다. 하지만 카타고는 완벽한 계산으로 이를 가뿐하게 타개해 냈다. 112수째에 이르러 흐름은 완전히 뒤집혔다. 역전을 허용한 신진서가 다시 전투를 걸었으나 격차는 오히려 더 벌어졌다. 패색이 짙어진 상황에서도 신진서는 다음 대국을 대비해 30분 가까이 끝내기를 이어가며 카타고를 분석했다. 단 한 차례의 실수도 범하지 않고 버텼지만, 30집 가까이 벌어진 격차를 뒤집기에는 역부족이었다. 결국 신진서는 돌을 던졌고 대국이 끝난 뒤에도 한참 동안 자리를 뜨지 못했다. '쎈수학·한경 기신전'은 승패와 관계없이 3국까지 치러진다. 신진서는 기본 대국료 1억 5000만 원을 확보했으며, 승리할 때마다 5000만 원의 수당을 추가로 받는다. 2승 이상을 거둘 경우 제네시스 G90이 부상으로 주어진다. 설욕을 노리는 신진서의 제2국은 오는 19일 같은 장소에서 열린다. psoq1337@newspim.com 2026-07-17 14:59
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