Henry Kaufman, the former chief economist of Salomon Brothers in the 70's and 80's who earned the moniker of "Dr. Doom" for his frequent criticisms of the Fed's interest rate policies, has some advice for President Trump on how to pick the next Fed Chair: find someone willing to break up the "too big to fail" banks.
“You’ve got to be small enough to fail” without that failure causing problems that cascade through the financial system, Kaufman said in the question-and-answer session of an Economic Club of New York breakfast on Oct. 5 at the imposing University Club on Fifth Avenue. As it is now, Kaufman said, “We are trying to preserve conglomeration.”
It’s more important for the next Fed chief to have a good understanding of how markets work than it is to own a Ph.D. in economics or to have been a business titan, Kaufman said.
William McChesney Martin, who ran the Fed from 1951 to 1970, never earned a graduate degree in economics. But he “turned in a good performance” in overseeing a period of healthy economic growth, Kaufman said. In contrast, he said, the two Fed chiefs who followed Martin allowed high inflation to become embedded in the U.S. economy in the 1970s. The first, Arthur Burns, was a distinguished Ph.D. economist from Columbia University. The second, G. William Miller, came to the Fed from Textron Inc., where he was chief executive officer.
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3 comments:
Of course Kaufman is correct.
He is stating the obvious.
It is delusional to believe it a good idea to have institutions that are TBTF.
The whole premise is that there are elites who own entities (banks) and these elites should never suffer from poor decisions.
Too big to fail is an excuse for monopoly capitalism.
Makes sense on the surface. But, are you old enough to remember the S&L crisis? Lots of small banks went defunct and it rippled through the banking system.
Absolutely, but that will be a tough nut to crack. The "Too Bigs" will be able to buy any move to break them up.
Remember, we're talking politicians here. They don't make money on salary, they make it on graft and collusion.
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