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Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Who Will Be The Next Fed Chair

Who will win the Fed Chairman/woman is coming down to two people.  In the following post by Nicolas Wapshott, he discusses the pros and cons of each.

We however believe there must be better choices. We especially are not enamored by Larry Summers as he was the former Harvard President who was kicked out due to sexually related matters. In the time of former Representative Weiner--we don't need more of that discussion. Additionally, he was responsible for loosening of the Glass-Stegal Act which allowed banks to own just about anything they desired. This lead to the 2008 collapse. He is not a good choice.

As far as Janet Yellen, she has not had enough experience to take on this very pivotal economic role and she would probably follow the same misplaced and poorly executed QE programs for which we will pay dearly in the not so distant time. And before anyone complains about this--we are considering her on HER merits. Her sex makes no difference to us.

We need an original thinker, someone who will work in the best interests of the entire country and not what is popular. We are entering a time in this country where problems that faced Greece and Cyprus might become our  conundrums.  We do not need a political hack or a warmed over theoretician.  We will need original ideas and out-of-box thinking combined with the leadership to make it all work.

Can someone recommend another person that would fill this role?

Conservative Tom


COLUMN - Despite flaws, Summers is the best candidate for Federal Reserve chair

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Tue Jul 30, 2013 12:12pm EDT
By Nicholas Wapshott
(Reuters) - The two-horse race to replace Ben Bernanke as the Federal Reserve chairman appears to have come down to gender. In a letter to the president, about a third of Senate Democrats have made clear they would like Bernanke's deputy Janet Yellen to replace him, primarily, though they do not openly say it, because she is a woman.
The White House, it seems, would prefer Larry Summers, Bill Clinton's U.S. Treasury Secretary who was also director of Barack Obama's National Economic Council. Summers is a distinguished economist, a former chief economist of the World Bank and briefly, until he was subsumed by controversy, president of Harvard University. (Summers writes a monthly column for Reuters.)
It is true there are not enough women in top positions. It is true, too, that Janet Yellen is a distinguished economist with considerable central bank experience. But her gender should not in itself be enough qualification for her to be awarded with one of the most important jobs in the nation.
The Fed chairmanship has always been a powerful position, but when there is gridlock in government thanks to the Republican majority in the House deciding to pass no new measures whatever, the Federal Reserve is the sole provider of economic policy. For that pivotal post we need the best person for the job.
There is a strong case for giving the job to Summers. He is not only a distinguished theoretical economist but an original thinker at a time when what we need above all is ingenuity. He is hard to pigeonhole. He has firm views and is headstrong, which should commend him to those who believe the Fed has become obedient to the executive branch. Although a lifelong Democrat, Summers rarely follows the party line.
His views on taxation are far from the tax-and-spend mantra many in his party hold. On the contrary, he is skeptical of the efficiency of capital gains taxes, believes that unemployment insurance, which is a form of tax, and welfare payments make long-term unemployment worse.
The first issue to confront the next Fed chairman is what to do about the unconventional monetary policy known as quantitative easing (QE) or buying of securities. Yellen is expected to follow closely in the footsteps of Ben Bernanke, the current chairman whose principal remedy for the L-shaped recovery we are currently enduring is to keep money cheap to the horizon until unemployment is tolerable. That means more QE. Even to mention that there may be a "tapering" of QE caused the markets to panic, so weaning the nation off cheap money and raising interest rates is not going to be easy.
Yet QE is a one-note samba. By now it has lost its potency. What does Yellen have in mind? We don't know. She, too, is an academic economist who, after a brief spell as chair of Clinton's Council on Economic Advisers, has spent the last nine years in the closed world of reserve banking. She has followed the reserve bankers' understandable reluctance to say too clearly what she thinks so as not to alarm the markets.
On the assumption he was in the running for the Fed chairmanship, Summers has also kept mum recently about what he would do to replace QE. In April, however, he was candid and clear. "QE in my view is less efficacious for the real economy than most people suppose," he said. He is concerned the economy will settle down into a "new normal" where we accept sluggish growth and high unemployment. He therefore recommends altering QE and allowing interest rates to rise.
"If we have slow growth, we are not going to keep thinking that 5.5 percent unemployment is normal," he told the Financial Times. "We are going to decide rightly or wrongly that the potential of the economy is less and therefore we are going to decide that we are closer to that potential and that is going to operate in favor of suggesting that we should normalize interest rates." What is needed is a subtle manipulator of the money supply at the Fed, which would recommend Summers to replace Bernanke.
So long as the Fed offers bold, confident leadership, Summers is bullish about the economy. "I think the market is underestimating the pace at which the Fed will alter its current course and the consequences of that for interest rates," he said. That does not mean money will become expensive to borrow, nor does he expect the current easy money regime will lead to inflation. "I think we are a long way from tight labor markets and therefore that the risks of acceleration in inflation are substantially less than many people suppose," he said.
Yet Summers comes with baggage. The least important is that since leaving government employ in 2010 he has been hired by Wall Street firms to proffer advice. This criticism comes from a most unlikely source, the Wall Street Journal, which, in a front page story, tried to make mischief by suggesting there was something wrong with being paid by Citigroup, NASDAQ, hedge fund D.E. Shaw, venture capitalists Andreessen Horowitz, and asset managers Alliance Partners. The paper even suggested there was something not quite right about him taking speaking fees.
Since the Chinese walls between church and state were torn down at the Journal by its new owner,Rupert Murdoch, muddying the waters between opinion and news, it is hard exactly to fathom whether this ad hominem criticism of Summers is policy-driven or merely vindictive. One of Summers's principal qualifications to lift the economy out of the doldrums is that he is welcome in Wall Street boardrooms and they highly value his opinions. He is no ivory tower theorist but a practical economist who wants private enterprise to lead the nation to prosperity.
It was telling the Journal could not resist reminding its readers in the second paragraph that Summers "remains on the Harvard University faculty after a tumultuous tenure as the school's president." The reference is not so much to his part in investment decisions that ended up losing Harvard $1 billion, but to his criticisms of faculty member Cornel West that caused the head of the African American Studies department to decamp for Princeton, and his questioning of why women do not prosper in science and engineering, which many interpreted as male chauvinism. Summers's ability to provoke argument and take unpopular positions will be used against him, but it provides further evidence of the independence of thought and action that would prove useful as head of the Fed.
More pertinently when discussing the Federal Reserve, Summers and former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan helped free the financial industry from the clutter of inhibiting regulations, a relaxation of the 1933 Glass-Steagall rules imposed during the New Deal that many believe contributed to the financial crash of 2008. That is a pertinent line of enquiry for senators to pursue if Summers is placed before them for confirmation. It is on his answers to that thorny subject rather than on trumped up charges about race and gender that he should be judged.
Yellen is the safe choice. Summers a gamble. Yellen's appointment will sail through the Senate. Summers will have to survive some tough grilling. Yellen has little experience living in the harsh limelight that comes with high office. Summers is an old soldier who will keep pounding on come what may. It would be far easier for the administration if Obama chose Yellen and that fact alone should commend the talented if tricky Summers.

(Nicholas Wapshott is the former New York bureau chief of The Times of London. Previously, he was editor of the Saturday Times of London, and founding editor of The Times Magazine. He is a regular broadcaster on MSNBC, PBS, and FOX News. He is the author of "Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher: A Political Marriage" (2007). His "Keynes Hayek: The Clash That Defined Modern Economics" was published by W.W.Norton in October. )

1 comment:

  1. "As far as Janet Yellen, she has not had enough experience to take on this very pivotal economic role..."

    You are kidding? She is Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve. There is no experience more relevant than that.

    Larry Summers would be a total disaster. If the Wall Street bankers could name one guy to get the job, it would be Summers. He has displayed his undying loyalty to them for 20 years. That is why I expect Obama to pick him. I'd take anybody but Summers.

    --David (OWS)

    --David

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