|
|
Bush nominates Ben Bernanke as new Fed chief |
| | www.chinaview.cn 2005-10-24 02:10:33 |
|
Related:
Bernanke to
maintain continuity with policy under Greenspan
|

|
| Bush listens after announcing
Ben Bernanke as the new Federal Chief in the Oval Office of the White
House in Washington D.C. October 24,
(Reuters) | WASHINGTON,
Oct. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- US President George W. Bush on Monday nominated Ben
Bernanke, chairman of the president's Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), to
replace Alan Greenspan as Federal Reserve (Fed)
chairman.
The nomination is subject to Senate
confirmation. Bernanke, 51, was sworn in as chairman of the president's CEA in
June 2005 after having served as a Fed board member since August 2002. He also
was a professor at Princeton University and chairman of the economics
department.
It was said that Bernanke has a reputation
as a straight-talking economist and a Republican who avoids telegraphing any
ideology.
While working at the Fed, Bernanke had
pushed for the central bank to be more specific in its inflation
objectives.
But Greenspan, who took over as the Fed
chairman in August 1987, has opposed setting a numerical target for inflation.
The 79-year-old chief's term ends on Jan. 31 next
year.
Greenspan's first government service was as
chairman of the president's CEA during the administration of President Gerald
Ford in the 1970s.
In 1987, when he was 61, Greenspan
was first selected as Fed chairman by Ronald Reagan. He was re-nominated by the
senior George Bush, and won two more selections for four-year terms by Bill
Clinton.
Under the leadership of Greenspan, the Fed
began in 1996 for the first time to announce on the day of its meeting whether
it had made any changes to the short-term interest rates the central bank
controls.
Local media had said that choosing a successor to Greenspan would be one of Bush's most important economic decisions as the Fed chief wields unequaled influence over US and world economic growth. Enditem |
|
|