The Arizona Republic

Yellen wins progressiv­es’ approval

As head of Fed, she helped restore economy

- Matthew Boesler

Early in Janet Yellen’s leadership of the Federal Reserve, protesters began showing up outside Fed conference­s to demand the central bank do more to help working Americans and minority groups.

The activists were there to criticize – but Yellen ended up winning them over, even to the point that they were vocal in supporting her for the second term at the Fed she was denied by President Donald Trump. Now she’s won the backing of progressiv­e Democrats to become President-elect Joe Biden’s choice to serve as America’s first female Treasury secretary.

Yellen, 74, is set to take up the post at a turbulent time for the U.S. economy, with millions thrown out of their jobs by the pandemic, and low-earners, women and people of color among those taking the biggest hits even as stock markets have roared back.

Democrats on the party’s left who could make trouble for Biden appointmen­ts have been pushing back against some contenders seen as having tooclose ties with the financial world. Yellen doesn’t fall into that category, judging by the rapid approval she got from one of the leading progressiv­es on Monday.

“Janet Yellen would be an outstandin­g choice for Treasury Secretary,” Senator Elizabeth Warren said Monday on Twitter. “She is smart, tough, and principled. As one of the most successful Fed Chairs ever, she has stood up to Wall Street banks.”

Repairing a battered labor market, the principal challenge for Biden’s economic team, was also the main theme of Yellen’s term as Fed chair. In that period, a new policy idea was taking hold: keep interest rates low enough to let the engine of job-creation heat up.

Yellen gets credit for playing a key role in that historic shift. In an October 2016 speech, she said there were “plau

sible ways” running the economy hot could fix damage caused by the 20072009 recession. “Increased business sales would almost certainly raise the productive capacity of the economy by encouragin­g additional capital spending,” she said. “A tight labor market might draw in potential workers who would otherwise sit on the sidelines.”

Although such speeches fanned her reputation as a dove on monetary policy, Yellen did engineer a series of rate increases starting in December 2015. The move was opposed by critics including the Center for Popular Democracy’s “Fed Up” campaign, which argued there was no need to tighten given the state of inflation.

Still she resisted pressure from some colleagues to move faster, ultimately winning some compliment­s from the campaigner­s who wore green shirts outside Fed forums during her tenure.

“She’s evidence-based, she’s been creative, she’s been open-minded,” said Benjamin Dulchin, the head of “Fed Up.” “She’s been willing to look at the reality of the economy she’s dealing with in the

past, and adjust her approach.”

The former Fed chief has also advocated for many of the causes favored by progressiv­es. Yellen has spoken out about the need for tighter financial regulation. She’s backed investment to mitigate the effect of climate change, one of Biden’s main campaign platforms – though she’s criticized the Green New Deal proposed by left-wing Democrats like Senator Bernie Sanders as too expensive, and argued for taxes on carbon emissions as a more practical marketbase­d approach.

As the first woman in charge of the Fed, she nudged the institutio­n toward greater diversity in its own staffing – as well as in the range of people that central bankers talk to about the economy.

“She really did open it up as an institutio­n,” said Dean Baker at the left-leaning Center for Economic Policy Research. “She said, ‘yeah, we can’t just meet with Wall Street people. We have to meet with people who are most affected by our policies.’ ”

There are still blemishes on her record in the eyes of some progressiv­es. In her next job, Yellen’s views on budget deficits may matter more than what she thinks about interest rates.

She is a director of the Committee for a Responsibl­e Federal Budget, a thinktank dedicated to warning about the risks of a rising national debt. She’s repeatedly argued that America’s public finances need to be put on a sustainabl­e track.

In the coronaviru­s crisis, worries about budget deficits faded into the background as $3 trillion of fiscal stimulus helped the economy bounce back faster than expected. Fed officials, short of their own tools, have been urging the government to keep spending. In an Oct. 19 Bloomberg Television interview, Yellen backed that view.

“While the pandemic is still seriously affecting the economy we need to continue extraordin­ary fiscal support, but even beyond that I think it will be necessary,” she said. That suggests Yellen isn’t likely to make trimming the budget a priority anytime soon.

“I think she would be really good in this crisis moment about pushing for more,” said Sam Bell, who runs Employ America, an organizati­on lobbying for pro-labor Fed appointmen­ts. In the longer run, he said, “I’m a little worried about what you might call the ’ 90s formula, that saw deficit reduction as a key priority.”

Treasury secretarie­s don’t have direct control over fiscal policy, though some have left their stamp on it. And in a Biden administra­tion that may have to get policy through a Republican-controlled Senate, key negotiatio­ns over government spending and taxation could take place elsewhere.

That political environmen­t will be a test for Yellen, according to Josh Bivens, research director at the progressiv­e Economic Policy Institute, who says he generally welcomes her appointmen­t because “she’s obviously as qualified as anybody in the world for this position.”

“My only tiny concern is about her willingnes­s to use all possible levers of power within Treasury to effect bold, progressiv­e change,” Bivens said. “I do get the sense lots of her policy career has involved searching for consensus. We’re just not in the era of consensus.”

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Janet Yellen is set to take up the post as Treasury secretary at a turbulent time for the U.S. economy.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Janet Yellen is set to take up the post as Treasury secretary at a turbulent time for the U.S. economy.

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