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Wanted: A Boring Leader for the Fed

New York Times Original article ›

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Candidates for chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve for 2014-

01/02/2009

Janet Yellen, John Taylor, Kohn, Dudley and Glenn Hubbard are candidates to replace Fed chairman Bernanke. Bernanke says he will not serve beyond Jan. 2014. Taylor has strong disagreement with the Fed's loose monetary policies. Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen provides continuity and scored highly in a WSJ July 2013 survey of candidates, for shaping monetary policy, forging consensus, and communicating policy.

Grouped Articles

Yellen Seen as Front-Runner for Top Fed Post

Wall Street Journal 07/19/2013

Fed Chairman’s Departure Casts a New Light on the Bush Legacy

New York Times 07/26/2013

Fed's Yellen Says Stance on Banks Hardened

Wall Street Journal 08/13/2013

Wanted: A Boring Leader for the Fed

New York Times 08/20/2013

Fed's Yellen, Husband Worth Up to $13.2 Million in 2012

Wall Street Journal 08/28/2013

Summers Withdraws Name for Fed Chairmanship

Wall Street Journal 09/16/2013

Criticism of Bernanke's role at the Federal Reserve

01/02/2009

The difficult renomination and the subsequent 70-30 vote with 30 Senators opposed including Boxer, Feingold, Sanders and others. This follows Ron Paul's criticisms in Congress of the Fed's role- see that link group.

Grouped Articles

Martin Feldstein: The Federal Reserve's Policy Dead End

Wall Street Journal 05/09/2013

Bhidé and Phelps: Central Banking Needs Rethinking

Wall Street Journal 07/16/2013

Fed Chairman’s Departure Casts a New Light on the Bush Legacy

New York Times 07/26/2013

Wanted: A Boring Leader for the Fed

New York Times 08/20/2013

The Fall of Summers

Wall Street Journal 09/15/2013

What's Needed in the Next Fed Chief

New York Times 09/15/2013

Central bank governors Ben Bernanke, Mario Draghi, Stanley Fischer, Mervyn King and the MIT Economics Department

01/28/2008

Ben Bernanke and Mervyn King once shared an office as professors at MIT. Stanley Fischer was Draghi's and Bernanke's PhD. advisor. The MIT economics department fostered a view in the 1990's in which central banks played an active role when markets failed and the economy stumbled. This followed a period of post-Keynes views at the universities of Rochester, Minnesota, and Chicago, that markets operated on rational expectations and needed minimal intervention by central banks.

Grouped Articles

A Hawkish Signal Bernanke Didn't Send

Wall Street Journal 06/25/2013

In Shift, Bank of England Pledges Low Rates

Wall Street Journal 08/08/2013

Wanted: A Boring Leader for the Fed

New York Times 08/20/2013

Stanley Fischer, Fed Nominee, Has Long History of Policy Leadership

New York Times 03/12/2014

Janet Yellen and Fed Predecessors Find Common Ground Onstage

New York Times 04/07/2016

MIT Forged Activist Views of Central Bank Role and Cinched Central Bankers' Ties

Wall Street Journal 12/12/2012


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