Thin-skinned need not apply
Names of prospects to replace Greenspan starting to surface
![]() Spencer Platt / Getty Images file Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan speaks in New York in this May 20 photograph. The names of possible successors are emerging. |
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Picking Alan Greenspan’s successor as chairman of the Federal Reserve will be one of Bush’s most important tasks. Greenspan, 79, has led the Fed since 1987. He is expected to step down on Jan. 31.
The next chairman will play a crucial role in steering the world’s largest economy so that it grows solidly and produces jobs without fanning inflation.
Fed experts say it is critical for Greenspan’s successor to maintain the central bank’s independence from political influence.
“Politicians like low interest rates. That’s a fact of life,” said Susan Phillips, a former member of the Federal Reserve Board.
“The ability to be able to raise rates even though politically unpopular is very important to the long-run well being of the economy,” said Phillips, dean of the George Washington School of Business.
Three frontrunners
Three people so far are drawing frequent mentions as possible successors to Greenspan. Each is a respected economist with a firm sense of how Washington works.
Martin Feldstein, 65. An economics professor at Harvard University and president of the National Bureau of Economic Research, he advised Bush when the Texas governor ran for president in 2000.
Feldstein says Bush’s tax cuts have helped the economy recover from the recession of 2001. Feldstein also has endorsed the president’s plan to overhaul Social Security, including letting workers set up personal investment accounts.
Feldstein has served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers from 1982 to 1984, during the Reagan administration. He often found himself at odds with the White House, however, over his persistent warnings about the negative effects of budget deficits.
“The challenge for policy now is to deal with the longer term budget problems of Social Security and Medicare that will begin when the baby boom generation retires a decade from now,” he wrote in 2002 in The Wall Street Journal.
The government ran a budget deficit in 2002 after four years of surpluses. The deficit climbed to $412 billion last year, a record in dollar terms.
R. Glenn Hubbard, 46. Dean of Columbia University’s graduate school of business and an economics professor, he was Bush’s chief economic adviser from 2001 to 2003.
Among the policies Hubbard helped shape was the elimination of taxes that individual investors pay on stock dividends. Congress in 2003 acted to cut taxes on some dividends. He also he promoted Bush’s idea for personal investment accounts.
In a commentary for BusinessWeek in January, Hubbard had kind words for the Fed: “Fed credibility in battling inflation has lowered market interest rates by making investors less worried that rising prices will cut into the value of their investment,” Hubbard said.
Hubbard worked for the first President Bush as deputy assistant secretary for tax analysis at the Treasury Department.
Feldstein was one of the supervisors on Hubbard’s dissertation for his Ph.D in economics at Harvard.
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