Tag: Brainard

  • Biden taps Fed’s Brainard as top economic adviser

    Biden taps Fed’s Brainard as top economic adviser

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    She will be leaving the Fed at a crucial juncture when it’s deciding how long to keep interest rates at punishingly high levels to kill inflation. If central bank officials press too hard, they could trigger a recession that pushes millions of people out of work.

    Still, the job market has remained resilient even as price spikes have cooled, raising the prospect that the Fed — and Biden — might be able to avoid widespread economic pain.

    POLITICO previously reported that Brainard and Bernstein were both poised to take these positions. Bloomberg earlier reported Biden’s decision.

    At the White House, Brainard will face lingering skepticism from the left over her time working as an adviser in Bill Clinton’s administration, where she was involved in implementing the North American Free Trade Agreement and negotiating China’s entry to the World Trade Organization. Many progressives viewed both moves as detrimental to the interests of American workers.

    Brainard, a Ph.D. economist, also served at Treasury under President Barack Obama, where she was the department’s top diplomat from 2010 to 2013, dealing with the euro crisis and working to pressure China to allow the value of its currency to be more influenced by market forces.

    She arose as a top contender for Treasury secretary when Hillary Clinton was running for president in 2016 — and faced criticism for donating to Clinton’s campaign. That was an unusual move for an official at the Fed, which is given extensive policy freedom in part because it’s expected to stay above the political fray.

    But she then built credibility with progressive Democrats by dissenting more than 20 times on moves by President Donald Trump’s appointees at the central bank. These included proposed rollbacks of regulations placed on big banks after the 2008 financial crisis.

    She also earned support from Fed Chair Jerome Powell for her resistance to efforts by another bank regulator to ease rules designed to combat discrimination against poor and minority borrowers, a historic practice known as redlining.

    Brainard has charted her own vision for reform of that law, the Community Reinvestment Act, that fellow Democrats are hopeful will be more responsive to the needs of lower-income communities. That regulation has not yet been finalized and is now facing legal threats from banks.

    She chairs four of the Fed’s internal committees, leading policy in key areas like whether the Fed should issue a central bank digital currency. It’s unclear who will take up those portfolios after she departs.

    She is married to Kurt Campbell, who served in the State Department under Obama and now is a top adviser to Biden on Asia.

    Bernstein, currently a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, will likely be nominated as its head, a Senate-confirmed position, unlike NEC director. He would replace Cecilia Rouse at the helm of the White House’s in-house economic research office. Rouse is returning to Princeton.

    Deese, 45, is leaving the NEC — which is housed inside the West Wing and is the more powerful of the two offices — to be closer to his family.

    He joined the White House from Wall Street investment giant BlackRock, which created some blowback from progressives wary of anyone with a history in the banking industry.

    Deese joined BlackRock as Global Head of Sustainable Investing after serving in senior roles in the Obama White House. During his time in the Biden administration, he played major roles in the president’s economic plans including the CHIPS Act and the Inflation Reduction Act.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Biden to remake economic team with Brainard, Bernstein poised for top roles

    Biden to remake economic team with Brainard, Bernstein poised for top roles

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    But it remains highly uncertain whether the Fed can navigate a so-called soft-landing for the economy, in which growth slows but the country averts a recession. And other big headaches loom, including a GOP-controlled House potentially forcing a market-shaking showdown over raising the government’s debt limit.

    Multiple senior Biden aides and others close to the process described the selection of Brainard and Bernstein, who is currently a member of the Council of Economic Advisers, as close to assured, but no formal announcement is set yet. It’s still possible that either job could wind up slipping to one of several other candidates or that new names could emerge, they said.

    Brainard, who is meeting with other Fed officials this week in Washington to decide on the central bank’s next interest rate hike, could not be reached for comment.

    “It’s not totally done yet,” one top White House official said, while not disputing that Brainard and Bernstein are the leading candidates. Another senior official agreed, while a third said the two appointments seemed definite but that Biden had not given a final sign-off.

    White House Deputy Press Secretary Emilie Simons said in a statement, “There is no decision on either of these positions and any reporting to the contrary is inaccurate.”

    The White House officials said installing Brainard at NEC to succeed Brian Deese would offer gender diversity to the economic leadership, It would also make it easier for Biden to pick his friend Bernstein, who is among a group of older, white male advisers, to head the CEA, the White House’s in-house economic research office. Current CEA Chair Cecilia Rouse is returning to Princeton. Deese is leaving the NEC — which is housed inside the West Wing and is the more powerful of the two offices — to be closer to his family,

    A Brainard and Bernstein combination would at least partially satisfy left-leaning Democrats who pushed for a younger and more aggressive candidate for the NEC job such as Bharat Ramamurti, the current NEC deputy and a former top staffer for Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.).

    Progressives had questioned Brainard’s commitment on some of their key issues since she served as President Barack Obama’s Treasury undersecretary for international affairs under then-Secretary Timothy Geithner. At the time, Brainard was viewed by many progressives as insufficiently aggressive on using executive tools to fight climate change and economic inequality and as too pro-free trade and friendly with elite global bankers.

    But Brainard has nudged left on some of those issues and been a progressive at the Fed on monetary policy — mostly preferring a gentler path of rate hikes to fight high inflation.

    Bernstein is widely admired in progressive circles while also holding credibility with more centrist-leaning Democrats and even some Capitol Hill Republicans. He has long been a vocal critic of trade agreements so could limit any fallout among organized labor groups over the Brainard pick.

    The selection of Brainard and Bernstein would come after weeks of feverish jockeying, often through strategic press leaks, for the top economic jobs, with a variety of names being floated as front-runners by Democratic insiders eager to see their preferred candidates get the jobs.

    The White House has also flirted with various Wall Street veterans for top positions, including investment bankers Blair Effron and Antonio Weiss. Putting any such candidate into a policy-influencing spot would likely have enraged progressives, and the idea appears to have been mostly dropped.

    Other candidates mentioned as candidates for NEC have included Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo, American University President and former Obama cabinet member Sylvia Mathews Burwell, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo and senior Biden economic adviser Gene Sperling.

    Friends say that Sperling, who served as NEC director under both Presidents Bill Clinton and Obama, coveted doing the job for what would be a record third time. Sperling, who splits his time between Washington and Los Angeles, has repeatedly denied wanting or campaigning for the job.

    Zients is viewed as a masterful manager and problem solver but less well-versed or interested in the kind of backroom political horse-trading required to push things like a debt limit deal through on Capitol Hill. Brainard has extensive Hill relationships as does Bernstein.

    Bernstein and Brainard are both considered centrist enough to offer some comfort to Wall Street investors and not averse to cutting deals with Republicans if that’s what it takes.

    Brainard’s departure from the Fed would leave a significant hole at the central bank, where she is a trusted No. 2 to Chair Jerome Powell.

    Brainard, a Ph.D. economist, also chairs four of the central bank’s internal committees, leading policy in key areas like whether the Fed should issue a central bank digital currency.

    Victoria Guida contributed to this report.

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )