Bangkok Post

Powell nominated for Fed chair

Friends say the moderate selection is intelligen­t and has gift for forging consensus

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As a choice to lead the Federal Reserve, Jerome Powell defies any recent mould.

He isn’t a trained economist. He’s produced no trail of research. He built a fortune as an investment manager.

Yet by the reckoning of Fed analysts — those who know him and those who don’t — Powell is equipped to lead the world’s most influentia­l central bank, presiding over a US economy on solid ground but hardly without risks.

What Powell brings to the position most of all, they say, is a formidable intelligen­ce, an appreciati­on of intellectu­al diversity and a gift for forging agreement. And in five years on the Fed’s board of governors, he has schooled himself in monetary policy while becoming a specialist in areas from banking regulation to the US payments system.

A moderate who is expected to follow the cautious approach to interest rates of the current Fed chair, Janet Yellen, Powell could serve as a steadying force for the US economy as well as a unifying figure among the central bank’s policymake­rs. As a Fed governor, Powell has never dissented from a central bank decision.

“A consensus builder” is how Shai Akabas, who worked with Powell at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a public policy think tank, describes him. Powell was for two years a visiting scholar at the centre, where, among other things, he focused on helping avert a crisis over raising the government’s debt ceiling, until he joined the Fed’s board in 2012. While at the think tank, it was Powell’s task to help convince congressio­nal Republican­s that a default on the debt would amount to a catastroph­e.

Akabas observed that Powell “was always trying to glean insights from those around him and use that to form opinions.”

Educated at Princeton University with a law degree from Georgetown, Powell, 64, known as Jay, spent many years in investment management — at Dillon Read and then at the Carlyle Group. His work there made him one of the wealthiest figures to serve on the Fed board. His most recent financial disclosure form places his wealth at between $19.7 and $55 million. And based on how government disclosure­s are drafted, his wealth may actually be closer to $100 million.

Yet those who know him describe a man of modesty and collegiali­ty, with little discernibl­e pretension. Earlier this year at Reagan National Airport, Matthew McCormick, a government economist who was travelling with him, said he watched Powell carry a car seat and luggage for a family he saw was struggling to make a connecting flight.

At the Bipartisan Policy Center, Jason Grumet, the founder, recalls that the organisati­on didn’t know what to expect from Powell, who had just finished several lucrative years at the Carlyle Group and earlier held a high-level Treasury Department post. Yet Powell was content to take an unassuming office near the photocopie­r with a view of an alley.

“Jay dug in with the intensity of a young analyst,” Grumet said. “He was like a junior staffer.”

A Washington native, Powell has long shown an impulse toward federal policy and service. Early in his career at Dillon Read, he followed Dillon’s former chairman, Nicholas Brady, to President George H.W. Bush’s Treasury Department. Brady had become Treasury secretary, and Powell became undersecre­tary for finance.

His work at the Bipartisan Policy Center led to his nomination by President Barack Obama to the Fed’s board.

In contrast to Powell, his predecesso­rs Bernanke and Yellen were nationally distinguis­hed economists before their Fed chairmansh­ips, with decades of research, papers and books attached to their names. In theory at least, they came to the Fed job prepared to lead the central bank’s response to unforeseen economic crises.

No one knew, after all, that Ben Bernanke would have to endure the stomach-churning threat to the financial system that forced him to preside over a raft of emergency actions to save the largest banks and, by extension, the economy.

What colleagues do know about Powell is that he won’t likely hesitate to rely on colleagues or advisers with deeper expertise. He is described as someone who believes deeply that differing opinions and background­s can help build common ground in public policymaki­ng.

In a speech last year, he took note of the value of having 12 Fed branches spread across the country. He suggested the regional difference­s provide an array of views to help produce superior monetary policy.

“My strong view is this institutio­nalised diversity of thinking is a strength of our system,” Powell said. “In my experience, the best outcomes are reached when opposing viewpoints are clearly and strongly presented before decisions are made.”

Powell, who projects a serious demeanor, is known for a lighter side as well. Friends say he strums rock and blues numbers on the guitar. He has been an avid golfer despite back pain.

He will even bring a dose of show business with him to the Fed. His wife, Elissa Leonard, who has worked in the film industry, is executive producer of a movie titled Ladies in Black.

IMDB describes it as “an alluring and tender-hearted comedy drama about the lives of a group of department store employees in 1959 Sydney.”

Powell also appears to take music seriously.

Alan Tonelson, a longtime commentato­r on internatio­nal trade, attended Princeton with Powell. In the fall of 1971, while playing cards with a group of students in a freshman dorm, Powell suggested they listen to an album by a group called “Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks”.

“Dan Hicks sucks,” Tonelson shot back. Four decades later, Tonelson reconnecte­d with Powell after his appointmen­t to the Fed. Powell looked at him and deadpanned, “Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks, huh?”

 ??  ?? Jerome Powell arrives in the Rose Garden on Thursday as he attends an announceme­nt on his nomination.
Jerome Powell arrives in the Rose Garden on Thursday as he attends an announceme­nt on his nomination.

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