President Obama said Friday that he's considering a range of
outstanding candidates to be the next chairman of the Federal Reserve
and that he'll make his decision in the fall.
Barack Obama also said that former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and current Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen are both highly qualified for the job, during a White House news conference.
Obama acknowledged that many think Summers has "an inside track" to the job after Obama gave a strong defense of him last week at a closed-door meeting with House Democrats. But Obama said he was simply standing up for Summers because he was "getting slapped around in the press for no reason."
"The perception that Mr. Summers might have an inside track simply had to do with a bunch of attacks that I was hearing on Mr. Summers preemptively, which is sort of a standard Washington exercise that I don't like," Obama said.
Summers served as the head of the National Economic Council during Obama's first term and Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton. Yellen has been a Fed governor and was chair of the White House's Council of Economic Advisers for Clinton.
Bernanke's current term ends on Jan. 31. The president's choice to succeed Bernanke would have to be confirmed by the Senate.
"I consider them both outstanding candidates," Obama said, referring to Yellen and Summers. And he also said that he had a "range of outstanding candidates" although he did not name any others. In his meeting with House Democrats, Obama had said that former Fed Vice Chairman Don Kohn was also being considered for the job.
The administration's search for a successor for Bernanke has been unusually public. And it has stood in stark contrast to the more behind-the-scenes process that previous administrations have used for vetting potential Fed chairmen.
Obama said that his main criteria are to find someone who strongly supports the Fed's dual mandate of keeping inflation in check while pursuing maximum employment.
"Right now the challenge is not inflation, the challenge is we've still got too many people out of work," Obama said "There's too much slack in the economy
Barack Obama also said that former Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers and current Fed Vice Chairman Janet Yellen are both highly qualified for the job, during a White House news conference.
Obama acknowledged that many think Summers has "an inside track" to the job after Obama gave a strong defense of him last week at a closed-door meeting with House Democrats. But Obama said he was simply standing up for Summers because he was "getting slapped around in the press for no reason."
"The perception that Mr. Summers might have an inside track simply had to do with a bunch of attacks that I was hearing on Mr. Summers preemptively, which is sort of a standard Washington exercise that I don't like," Obama said.
Summers served as the head of the National Economic Council during Obama's first term and Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton. Yellen has been a Fed governor and was chair of the White House's Council of Economic Advisers for Clinton.
Bernanke's current term ends on Jan. 31. The president's choice to succeed Bernanke would have to be confirmed by the Senate.
"I consider them both outstanding candidates," Obama said, referring to Yellen and Summers. And he also said that he had a "range of outstanding candidates" although he did not name any others. In his meeting with House Democrats, Obama had said that former Fed Vice Chairman Don Kohn was also being considered for the job.
The administration's search for a successor for Bernanke has been unusually public. And it has stood in stark contrast to the more behind-the-scenes process that previous administrations have used for vetting potential Fed chairmen.
Obama said that his main criteria are to find someone who strongly supports the Fed's dual mandate of keeping inflation in check while pursuing maximum employment.
"Right now the challenge is not inflation, the challenge is we've still got too many people out of work," Obama said "There's too much slack in the economy
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