http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/opinion/choosing-the-next-fed-leader.html<http://www.nytimes.com/2013/07/30/opinion/choosing-the-next-fed-leader.html?hp>

The New York Times
July 29, 2013
Choosing the Next Fed Leader
By THE EDITORIAL BOARD

Despite a campaign from allies both inside and outside the White House, the
recent drive to install Lawrence Summers as the next chairman of the
Federal Reserve seems to be faltering — and with good reason: He is not the
best person for the job, as a group of Democratic senators made clear in a
letter to President Obama last week calling for the nomination of Janet
Yellen, the vice chairwoman of the Fed’s board of governors.

But the group behind Mr. Summers does not give up easily. Composed of
protégés of Robert Rubin, the former Treasury secretary who was a leader at
Citigroup as that institution careened toward its serial bailouts, some of
Mr. Summers’s supporters are now pushing the notion that neither Mr.
Summers nor Ms. Yellen should get the top Fed job. The idea is that the
supposed rivalry between them — fanned by Mr. Summers’s supporters — has
consumed both of them, requiring a third candidate.

That is nonsense. Nothing that has occurred in the past week changes the
fact that no one else can match Janet Yellen’s combination of academic
credentials and policy-making experience. And no one ever confirmed to the
job has come to it with as deep a grounding in both the theory and practice
of monetary and regulatory policy as Ms. Yellen would bring.

A Yale educated economist and professor emeritus at the University of
California, Berkeley, she was first nominated and confirmed to the Fed
board in the 1990s; from 2004 to 2010, she served as the president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. She has been vice chairwoman since
2010, a trying time in which the Fed’s largely successful efforts to steer
the economy have been made all the more difficult by poor fiscal policy
decisions, including the White House’s premature pivot from stimulus to
deficit reduction, which happened while Mr. Summers was a top adviser to
Mr. Obama.

What has changed in the past week is that the power dynamics around
economic policy-making have become more public than normal. Mr. Rubin and
his circle — including Mr. Summers; Timothy Geithner, Mr. Obama’s first
Treasury secretary; and Gene Sperling, currently a top economic adviser to
the president — have dominated economic decisions in both the Clinton and
Obama administrations. Most of them were also prominent in Wall Street
circles in the George W. Bush years. In the wake of the financial crisis
and the Dodd-Frank reform law, the Fed chairmanship has only become more
central to the fate of the banks and economy; as a result, they want
someone who shares their background and can be counted on to further their
views.

Ms. Yellen is not that person, not only, or even mainly, because of policy
differences but because she is not part of the fraternity. Indeed, she is
reminiscent of other accomplished women with whom Mr. Summers, or his
supporters, or both have tangled in the past.

In 1998, Mr. Rubin and Mr. Summers opposed Brooksley Born, then the
chairwoman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, for correctly
calling for the regulation of derivatives; in 2009, Mr. Summers squelched
the sound recommendation of Christina Romer, then an economic adviser to
Mr. Obama, for a larger stimulus. In the first Obama term, Mr. Geithner
clashed unhelpfully with Sheila Bair, then the chairwoman of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and with Elizabeth Warren, then the
chairwoman of the Congressional panel overseeing the bailouts.

In the end, the choice rests with Mr. Obama. The facts are entirely on Ms.
Yellen’s side. Is the president?

-- 
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to