Ben Bernanke's Fed: The Federal Reserve After Greenspan
By (Author) Ethan S. Harris
Harvard Business Review Press
Harvard Business Review Press
11th September 2008
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
332.11092
Hardback
237
Width 162mm, Height 241mm
538g
Ben Bernanke's swearing in as Federal Reserve chairman in 2006 marked the end of Alan Greenspan's long, legendary career. To date, the new chair has garnered mixed reviews. Business economists see him as the best-qualified successor to Greenspan, while many traders and investors worry that he's too academic for the job. Meanwhile, many ordinary Americans do not even know who he is.
How will Bernanke's leadership affect the Fed's actions in the coming years How will Bernanke build on Greenspan's success, but also put his own stamp on the Fed What will all this imply for businesses and investors In Ben Bernanke's Fed, Ethan Harris provides exceptional insights into these crucial issues.
As a leading "Fed watch" economist, Harris draws on Bernanke's academic research, his speeches as a governor of the Fed, and his first two years on the job to shed light on:
How the Federal Reserve analyzes and manages the economy using a synthesis of classical and Keynesian theory
Bernanke's strategies for fighting inflation
The implications of the new chair's remarkably plain-spoken style
How Bernanke has cultivated diverse viewpoints but still builds consensus within the Fed
Engaging and discerning, this book demystifies the man who has stepped into what many describe as the second most powerful job in America.
Ethan S. Harris is a member of Lehman Brothers' Global Economics team. A U.S. chief economist, he started his career at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, joining Lehman Brothers in 1996.