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Bush names another free market ally of Wall Street
to succeed Greenspan at the Federal Reserve
By Kate Randall
26 October 2005
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President Bush on Monday named Ben S. Bernanke to succeed Federal
Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, who will step down January
31 after serving as the Fed chief since 1987.
Bernanke was quick to reassure Wall Street that his appointment
would not signal any significant shift from the policies pursued
by the Federal Reserve for the past 18 years. My first priority
will be to maintain continuity with the policies and policy strategies
established during the Greenspan years, Bernanke told reporters
following the White House announcement.
Stock prices shot up Monday on the news of Bernankes
nomination for the top Fed post, with the Dow Jones industrial
average rising 169.78 points, or 1.7 percent, the biggest rally
in six months. The appointment is seen by Wall Street analysts
as a sign that there will be no diversion from the economic principles
of the Greenspan erapolicies which have led to unprecedented
wealth accumulation for a tiny elite and growing levels of poverty
for masses of working people.
The appointment comes at a time of growing nervousness in financial
circles over the state of the US and world economy, and these
concerns have been heightened by the prospect of Greenspans
retirement. Massive US budget, balance of trade and balance of
payments deficits, soaring oil prices and an upsurge in inflation
have roiled the stock market and fueled a sense of foreboding.
These concerns were reflected in an editorial in Tuesdays
Washington Post which, while praising Bernanke, noted,
... he has never had to manage the response to the default
of a country, the collapse of the dollar or the implosion of a
big hedge fund, all crises that may lie in his future.
The Hurricane Katrina disaster exposed the social devastation
produced by more than a quarter century of unbridled capitalism,
in which huge tax cuts for big business and the rich, the lifting
of regulations on corporate profit-making, privatization and the
gutting of the social safety net have undermined the countrys
infrastructure and the ability of government to carry out elementary
functions essential to modern mass society. The desperate plight
of hundreds of thousands of trapped and abandoned residents of
New Orleans underscored the worsening plague of poverty in the
midst of staggering levels of personal wealth.
Yet two months later, the appointment of Bernanke, another
right-wing exponent of free market policies, to head
the most powerful banking institution in the world testifies to
the determination of the American ruling elite to pursue the same
socially destructive agenda, subordinating all public considerations
to the further accumulation of private wealth.
Ben Bernanke, 51, has been an academic for most of his career,
most recently as the head of the Department of Economics at Princeton
University. He was appointed by Bush in 2002 to the Feds
board of governors, where he served alongside Greenspan. This
past June he was named by Bush to head the Presidents Council
on Economic Advisers.
Bernankes nomination was hailed in the media as a welcome
contrast to Bushs naming of his long-time associate and
crony Harriet Miers to the US Supreme Court. As important as the
Supreme Court, a cornerstone of the bourgeois state, is for the
US ruling elite, the Federal Reserve Board is regarded with even
more deference within the upper echelons of the corporate and
financial establishment. It exerts enormous power over decision-making
bearing directly on the most fundamental economic and class interests
of the ruling elite. In regard to this post, the forces that dominate
American society are not inclined to permit the short-term political
calculations or personal ties of a mere president to intrude.
Hence Bushs decision to pass over his inner circle and name
someone eminently acceptable to Wall Street.
Bernanke is, in any event, an avid supporter of the administrations
pro-business economic policies. He spoke at length praising Bushs
tax cuts in an October 11 address to the National Economists Club.
In an editorial on Tuesday, the Wall Street Journal wrote,
As for Mr. Bernanke, he supports making the Bush tax cuts
permanent as soon as possible. Hes an ardent free trader,
and we have heard him say favorable things about tax reform.
His nomination has prompted nearly universal praise from the
financial and banking industry. In a note to clients, Goldman
Sachs economist William Dudley described Bernanke as highly
competent and a monetary policy expert. A statement released
by the Mortgage Bankers Association applauded his selection.
The response to Bernankes nomination has been highly
favorable across the official political spectrum, as indicated
by Tuesdays editorial in the New York Times, the
newspaper most identified with Americas erstwhile liberal
establishment.
The Times was nearly gushing in its praise, writing,
Mr. Bush may have just picked the best person for the job.
As a governor at the Federal Reserve, the Times writes,
Bernanke was a superb monetary economist who won over financial
markets. The editorial concludes: Clearly, Mr. Bernanke
will have a tough job filling Mr. Greenspans shoes. But
he is as close to the perfect choice as Mr. Bush could have made.
The bipartisan support for Bernanke in the Senate, which must
confirm Bushs nominee, was signaled by Senator Charles Schumer,
Democrat of New York and a member of the Banking Committee. Schumer
said, We need a careful, nonideological person who understands
that the Federal Reserves main job is to fight inflation,
and Ben Bernanke seems to fit that bill.
The anti-working class offensive that has been the hallmark
of the Fed under Greenspan has gained the outgoing Fed chairman
the adulation of Democrats and Republicans, conservatives and
liberals alike. As Greenspan approaches retirement,
he is being hailed as an icon. In its editorial Tuesday,
the Washington Post referred to his nearly mythical
status.
In reality, in his 18-year tenure as Federal Reserve Board
headan unelected position, wielding vast power over the
lives of millions in the US and beyondGreenspan has presided
over the greatest transfer of wealth in US history from the working
population to the financial elite.
This growth of social inequality has been accompanied by obscene
levels of self-enrichment on the part of corporate America and
its widespread descent into criminality, undermining the financial
stability of many companies. Corporate bankruptcies have mounted,
wiping out billions of dollars in assets, hundreds of thousands
of jobs, and the pensions and savings of millions of retirees
and small shareholders.
This gouging of the economy in the interests of the wealthy
began in earnest under Greenspans predecessor, Paul Volcker,
who was appointed Fed chairman by Democratic President Jimmy Carter
in 1979. Under conditions of double-digit inflation, Volcker drastically
drove up interest rates, creating conditions of recession and
mass unemployment and undermining the wages struggles of workers.
Under the Republican administration of Ronald Reagan, the attack
on the working class was intensified, with a wave of wage-cutting,
factory closures and union-busting, inaugurated by the August
1981 mass firing of the air traffic controllers in the PATCO union.
In 1987, Alan Greenspan was tapped by Reagan to head the Federal
Reserve.
A review of economic indices in the years from Volckers
1979 appointment to the present provides some measure of the growth
of social polarization and inequality, a trend which the ruling
class and its political representatives hope to perpetuate with
the installation of Bernanke.
Since 1979, the after-tax income of the top 1 percent of Americans
has increased by 201 percent. The top 20 percent has seen its
income grow by 68 percent; the middle 20 percent by 15 percent.
By contrast, the after-tax income of the bottom 20 percent has
increased by a mere 9 percent.
Another statistic charts CEO pay at Fortune 100 companies as
a multiple of the average pay of workers at the same firms. In
1980, CEO pay was 41 times that of the average worker; a decade
later it was 85 times greater. By 2000, CEO pay at Fortune 100
companies was 531 times greater than that of the average worker.
This astonishing figure was only slightly mitigated a year later,
to a multiple of 411, as a result of the bursting of the stock
market bubble.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, workers
average weekly earnings (measured in 1982 dollars) have gone down
in 15 of the 26 years from 1979 through 2004, including a .84
percent drop in 2004.
In 2004, the number of millionaire households in the US grew
to 7.5 million, with this layer controlling $11 trillion in assets.
The minimum wage, however, has plummeted in real terms. It is
today 26 percent lower than in 1979. Only last week, the US Senate
rejected a proposal to raise the national minimum wage from its
current poverty level of $5.15 per hour.
See Also:
US Federal Reserve hikes interest
rates
No post-Katrina letup in assault on wages
[22 September 2005]
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