1. Betting on Ben.
- Subjects
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ECONOMIC policy , *CENTRAL banking industry ,FEDERAL Reserve Board members - Abstract
The article focuses on Ben Bernanke, a former Princeton professor of economics who is awaiting Senate confirmation to replace Alan Greenspan as chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. At the height of the stockmarket bubble in 1999, he co-authored an influential paper with Mark Gertler of New York University which argued that central banks should focus on asset prices only insofar as they are likely to influence consumer prices. Targeting asset prices directly, his paper claimed, would create more, not less, instability. This suggests that a Bernanke Fed might be even less inclined to fret about soaring house prices than Mr Greenspan, who has only recently worried aloud about them. Everyone knows that Mr Bernanke, unlike Mr Greenspan, is a long-standing supporter of the idea that the Fed should set a public target for inflation against which it can be held accountable, as many central banks do. Mr Bernanke will doubtless nudge the Fed towards inflation-targeting. But the change is likely to be evolutionary rather than radical. His initial task will be to prove his inflation-fighting credentials and shake off a lingering reputation for dovishness.
- Published
- 2005