Google – AFP, Paul Handley (AFP), 10 October 2013
Washington
— US President Barack Obama has nominated economist Janet Yellen to lead the
Federal Reserve in a move expected to sustain the central bank's easy money
policies and efforts to curb joblessness.
If
approved, Yellen would replace outgoing Ben Bernanke as chair of the Fed next
February, under heavy pressure to make sure that global growth is not derailed
when its longstanding stimulus policy is eventually reined in.
Obama
called the first woman ever named to take the helm at the world's most powerful
central bank as "exceptionally qualified" for the job.
"America's
workers and families will have a champion in Janet," Obama said at a White
House ceremony, flanked by Yellen and Bernanke, stating that his pick
"sounded the alarm early" about housing and financial bubbles that
led to the 2008-2009 recession.
![]() |
Economist
Janet Yellen smiles as US President
Barack Obama announces her nomination as
Federal Reserve chairman at the White House
in Washington, DC, on October 9,
2013 (AFP,
Jewel Samad)
|
"She
is a proven leader, and she's tough. Not just because she is from
Brooklyn," he quipped, calling for Yellen to be quickly confirmed by the
Senate.
"She
doesn't have a crystal ball, but what she does have is a keen understanding of
how the markets and the economy work, not just in theory but also in the real
world," he added.
Yellen said
she would not break with the US central bank's current easy-money policies
aimed at pushing down unemployment, still high at 7.3 percent in August.
"More
needs to be done to strengthen the recovery, particularly for those hardest hit
by the Great Recession," she added as she accepted Obama's nomination.
"The
mandate of the Federal Reserve is to serve all the American people. And too
many Americans still can't find a job, and worry how they'll pay their bills
and provide for their families."
Yellen, 67,
with years of experience in academia and the central bank, has served as Fed
vice chairman since 2010.
In that
time she has been closely tied to key policy changes, including setting targets
for inflation and unemployment, and making the thinking of Fed policymakers
more open.
Yellen
studied economics at Brown University and then Yale, where she earned a
doctorate.
She is married to economics Nobel prize winner George Akerlof, who
teaches at the University of California, Berkeley. Both are known for taking
economic texts to the beach on vacation.
"The
truth is," Yellen once told an interviewer, "if you spent an evening
at our house you would probably hear economics discussed over the dinner
table."
"You
would eat a diet that is richer in discussions of economics and policy issues
than many people would find appetizing."
Her
nomination was not a surprise after the presumed favorite, former Treasury
secretary Lawrence Summers, pulled out of the running after several top
Democratic senators voiced vehement opposition.
Though
criticized by conservatives as a Fed "dove" -- one of a camp
allegedly too determined to stimulate growth and not adequately worried about
the threat of inflation -- Yellen is certain to get a better reception in the
Senate than Summers would have received.
Senator
Elizabeth Warren, who was part of the Democratic revolt on the Senate Banking
Committee against a Summers nomination, gave Yellen a thumbs-up on Wednesday.
"Janet
has extraordinary experience and a proven track record of strong judgment and
management savvy," Warren said in a statement.
The
committee's senior Republican, Mike Crapo, was more measured, saying her
nomination would be "carefully reviewed," noting his own opposition
to the Fed's $85 billion a month bond-buying stimulus, known as quantitative
easing.
Markets
were little moved by the nomination, with the S&P 500 stock index ending
the day flat, and the US dollar edging higher along with long-term bond yields.
International
Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde called the nomination
"great".
"She's
very competent, she's my friend, I'm delighted she's there," said Lagarde,
who in recent months has sternly warned the Fed not to cut back its stimulus
too fast to avoid injecting more turbulence into global markets.
However,
one of Yellen's first tasks will be to judge how quickly to taper the huge
stimulus.
Economists
and markets had expected the cuts to begin last month.
But the
Bernanke-led Federal Open Market Committee held off, pointing to some signs of
weakness in the economy and the threat to stability posed by Washington's
political paralysis over the budget and debt ceiling.
Ian
Shepherdson of Pantheon Macroeconomics said the FOMC is likely to hold off on
the stimulus taper until next year.
"It's
difficult to imagine sufficient improvement in the hard employment data could
emerge in time for Dr. Yellen to push for tapering at her very first meeting as
chairman, on March 18/19.
The June meeting, in our view, is a better bet."
![]() |
| A file photo dated 10 October 2012 showing Janet Yellen, Vice Chair of the US Federal Reserve System, attending a sem |
Related Article:



No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.