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Bernanke Saying He’s Dispensable Suggests Tenure Ending

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Bernanke: I'm Not ‘Only Person’ to Manage QE Exit

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke said he’s “spoken to the president a bit” about his future and that he feels no personal responsibility to stay at the helm until the Fed winds down its unprecedented policies to stimulate the economy.

“I don’t think that I’m the only person in the world who can manage the exit,” Bernanke said when asked at a news conference in Washington if he’s discussed his plans with President Barack Obama. His term expires at the end of January.

Bernanke’s comments yesterday meshed with the views of some of Obama’s economic and political advisers who said Bernanke, 59, after spending most of his seven years on the job battling a financial crisis and its aftermath, is exhausted and wants to return to private life. The current and former administration officials asked to not be identified to describe the private conversations.

Michelle Smith, a Fed spokeswoman, declined to comment. Amy Brundage, a White House spokeswoman, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Yesterday’s remarks were a departure from Bernanke’s previous statements that he hasn’t discussed his plans with Obama or White House officials.

On Dec. 12, during his last news conference, Bernanke said that he hadn’t “had any conversations” with the president or anyone on his team about his potential departure.

Earlier Statement

“I think the president has got quite a few issues he needs to be thinking about, from the fiscal cliff to many other appointments and so on,” he said then, when asked if he would serve a third term.

Since his December remarks, Bernanke has had several meetings with Timothy F. Geithner, when he was still Treasury secretary, including one with the president. Geithner left that meeting early, giving Obama and the Federal Reserve chairman some private time, according to a person familiar with the meeting.

Yesterday, Bernanke said, “I’ve spoken to the president a bit, but I really don’t have any, I don’t really have any information for you at this juncture.”

Bernanke, a former Princeton University professor, also said he didn’t feel personally responsible to lead the Fed when it unwinds its balance sheet.

‘Too Valuable’

Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at Bank of Tokyo- Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd. in New York, disagreed with Bernanke’s statement, saying he has an obligation to stay.

“His knowledge and experience is too valuable to let him go,” Rupkey said today in an e-mail. “The architect of the policy needs to see it through to full completion.”

Bernanke, a student of the Great Depression, took steps unprecedented in the Fed’s 100-year history to steer the economy through its worst crisis since the 1930s.

He used the Fed’s balance sheet to rescue Bear Stearns Cos. and American International Group Inc. (AIG) from collapse, while supporting corporations and small businesses with innovative lending programs that kept credit flowing as banks struggled under rising amounts of home-loan delinquencies.

He cut the benchmark lending rate to zero in December 2008 to boost the economy and then continued to provide stimulus with outright bond purchases, expanding the Fed’s total assets to a record $3.17 trillion. Yesterday, Bernanke said the Fed would maintain its $85 billion in monthly asset purchases and keep its key rate near zero.

‘Thank’ Bernanke

“You can thank Ben Bernanke that we are not in a global depression,” Bank of Israel Governor Stanley Fischer said on June 27.

Bernanke said yesterday that one of the things he hoped to accomplish and was “not entirely successful at, as the governor or as the chairman of the Federal Reserve, was to try to depersonalize to some extent monetary policy and financial policy and to get broader recognition of the fact that this is an extraordinary institution.”

“It has a large number of very high-quality policy makers, it has a terrific staff, literally dozens of PhD economists who’ve been working through the crisis, trying to understand these issues and implement our policy tools,” Bernanke said. “And there’s no single person who is essential to that.”

Vetting Process

While the Obama administration hasn’t started the formal process of gathering names and presenting them to the president, Jacob J. Lew, Obama’s Treasury secretary, and Gene Sperling, director of the National Economic Council, will probably lead the effort, said one administration official.

Four years ago, in the lead-up to Bernanke’s re-nomination, the process was run by Geithner. Larry Summers, then the director of the NEC, was excluded because he was also interested in the position, said the official.

With the Fed’s chairmanship staggered to the president’s four-year term, the last three Fed chairmen have served a total of six presidents. Five of the last six presidents have inherited a chairman who they then re-nominated.

Bernanke and his immediate predecessors, Paul Volcker and Alan Greenspan, were all reappointed by a president from a different party than the president who initially nominated them.

The circumstances of their eventual departures were unique and depended on their personal relationship with the president.

“It’s not a formal process,” Greenspan said in an interview. “It’s an individual decision by two people: the chairman of the Federal Reserve and the president of the United States.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Hans Nichols in Washington at hnichols2@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Steven Komarow at skomarow1@bloomberg.net

Enlarge image Bernanke Saying He’s Dispensable Suggests Tenure Winds Down

Bernanke Saying He’s Dispensable Suggests Tenure Winds Down

Bernanke Saying He’s Dispensable Suggests Tenure Winds Down

Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve.

Ben S. Bernanke, chairman of the U.S. Federal Reserve. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

March 20 (Bloomberg) – Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke offers his views on the central bank's monetary policy, the U.S. economy and the financial crisis in Cyprus. The Fed will keep up its bond buying at a pace of $85 billion a month even as the world’s largest economy and the job market pick up. (Excerpts. Source: Bloomberg)

March 20 (Bloomberg) -- Bloomberg's Peter Cook and RBC Capital's Tom Porcelli discuss Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's future at the Fed. They speak with Trish Regan on Bloomberg Television's "Street Smart." (Source: Bloomberg)

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