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Jan 28 2010, 4:14 pm

Bernanke Confirmed for Second Term by 70-30 Vote

The Senate voted to confirm a second term for Federal Reserve Chairman -- and Time Person of the Year -- Ben Bernanke.

After the Senate voted 77-23 to move ahead with the confirmation, Jay Cost of Real Clear Politics tweeted that the Senate just voted for cloture on Ben Bernanke's confirmation. Immediately thereafter came the tweet from Jim DeMint:  "By confirming Bernanke, the Senate rubber-stamped a failed economic policy."  Perhaps, but what was the alternative?

Throwing markets into turmoil as we toss Bernanke aside and start over?  What sort of qualified candidates does Senator DeMint think we'll get, after he's punished one of the world's greatest experts on financial crises for, well, being in office when one happened?  More frightening to contemplate: what sort of candidate would have been confirmable if Bernanke's nomination had failed?  It's getting harder and harder to get people into office, especially in finance, where any nominee who knows anything is too apt to have ties to the banking industry, or have employed a nanny without paying social security taxes, or have some other disqualifying flaw that doesn't actually have much bearing on their ability to do the job.

Bernanke's current policies would have to be much more terrible than they are to justify throwing him out of office without even a suitable replacement in mind.  It would be one thing if Democrats (or Republicans, for that matter) had been carefully grooming a substitute with an excellent resume and a good shot at confirmation.  But the "no" votes are, in my perhaps cynical view, more about what happened in Massachusetts last week than about any coherent policy agenda.  That's not a good way to make decisions, and the likely outcome would have been greatly inferior to whatever you think is going to happen in a second Bernanke term.

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Comments (3)

Ben Bernanke is featured in the new movie "Stock Shock-The Short Selling of the American Dream" The DVD is pretty much everywhere but cheaper at www.stockshockmovie.com

Great argument. Worthy of Alan Greenspan. Let stock market prices determine economic policy and claim that there is no alternative to sticking with the status quo.

And all the "best" rich people who could run the fed are being kept away because the filthy masses don't understand the tax problems their "betters" have employing full-time servents.

Bernanke's policy of buying the US deficit by printing dollars and keeping interest rates at zero are only going to lead to a bigger bubble than the housing bubble. We already have a problem in that the "carry trade" has people borrowing money in the US to invest in other places.

For almost 15 years we have been holding down interest rates to manipulate the economy. The result has been a stock market and real estate bubble. We need a new vision at the Fed. There are at least three people at the Fed today who would make a better chairman than Bernanke.


Agreed with both Jd and ulabrana above,

Megan, perhaps you'd better find better aquaintances? (Liked the add as well)

Just me.

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