NEWSMAKER-Volcker brings experience with economic malaise

Wed Nov 26, 2008 10:46am EST
 
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By David Lawder

WASHINGTON, Nov 26 (Reuters) - Paul Volcker, the towering former Federal Reserve chairman who tamed U.S. inflation a generation ago, brings experience with rocky economic times and tough choices to his new role as a key financial adviser to President-elect Barack Obama.

The 81-year-old Volcker, who ran the U.S. central bank from 1979 to 1987, will face a maelstrom of financial turmoil, government bailouts and a deepening recession at an age when even his successor, Alan Greenspan, is enjoying retirement.

Volcker, who has remained active in public service, gained Obama's confidence during the election campaign as the credit crisis deepened, advising the Illinois senator to back the U.S. Treasury's request for a $700 billion financial rescue fund.

As chair of a special White House advisory panel, Volcker will provide advice on steering the United States out of recession and stabilizing financial markets.

In that role, he will act as a counterbalance to Obama policy heavyweights Lawrence Summers, who will head the National Economic Council, and Timothy Geithner, who has been nominated to be the next Treasury secretary.

Volcker commands respect from Democrats and Republicans alike for his decisiveness in ending a devastating inflationary spiral in the late 1970s. He did so by hiking interest rates to unprecedented levels, launching a recession in 1981-82 that was the worst since the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Many think the economy now faces a recession just as deep.

That effort more than a quarter century ago has been credited by many, including Volcker, for setting the stage for steady growth and a long bull market that brought prosperity to millions of Americans. Initially appointed by President Jimmy Carter to head the U.S. central bank, he was reappointed by Republican President Ronald Reagan.

"Without Paul Volcker's toughness and guts, we may never have broken the grip of rising inflation and declining productivity that plagued the United States during the 1970s," former Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Arthur Levitt wrote in the foreword of Joseph Treaster's 2004 biography "Paul Volcker: The Making of a Financial Legend."

Volcker, however, later conceded that he had made a mistake by ordering such a major squeeze on credit, telling Reuters in 1987 that if he could, "I would have played it different."

SUPPORTIVE OF FED RESCUE EFFORTS

Now, he will wrestle with how to restore credit flows, rather than how to stop them.

Volcker has supported current Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke's approach to the credit crisis. Bernanke has moved aggressively to pump funds into the banking system and avoid massive financial institution failures.

Last month, Volcker said the United States was already in a recession that could be "rather long."

He said the new administration needed to rebuild trust and confidence in government financial policies, and said the economy needed more investment and infrastructure development.  Continued...

 
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