In January, we
had a post entitled “The Yellen Era?”
where we discussed how Yellen might herald a new approach to Fed
policy. For those watching the Fed so
far, they might not detect any change.
Quantitative easing, initiated by Ben Bernanke, has been maintained
although lightened to the current $35 billion per month. Financial markets have benefitted most from
this policy, and while unemployment in the US has declined and growth has
picked up, the labor-force participation rate (at 62.9%) remains disappointing
and the long-term outlook for the economy lackluster.
In an interview with the New Yorker published on July 21, 2014, Janet Yellen acknowledged that the short-term objective of the Fed after the financial crisis was to avoid immediate disaster. This was also discussed by Timothy Geithner in his book, Stress Tests: Reflections on Financial Crises, writing that bankers were “collateral beneficiaries” of the government’s bail-out of banks, designed to prevent a financial calamity from crushing the economy. Now that the balance sheets of US banks have been restored, how can Main Street be revived? What happens in the US is important as it points to what may happen elsewhere.
Yellen reaffirmed her passion for Main Street and talked
about her mission “to help bring to an end, once and for all, a dark period in
economics that began decades before the financial crisis” to one more concerned
with employment and to “core aspects of human well-being” which is what she
believes economics should be about. As a student of Tobin, she is passionate
about social justice and public policy. In
discussing financial markets, she acknowledged that they are not always
efficient. This is indeed a departure from
the blind faith in investor rationality that prevailed prior to the financial
collapse. In a quiet way, without
causing waves, is Yellen gradually paving the way for, in her words, “public
policy…[and] our social obligation…to make the world a better place”?
Many are watching the Fed…and Janet Yellen, the most
liberal Fed Chair since Mariner Eccles of the Roosevelt administration, to see
how she may live out her commitment to improve the economy for ordinary people,
not just market players.
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