Janet Yellen, a “dove” at the head of the US Treasury

Janet Yellen, then chairman of the US Federal Reserve, in Washington, DC, in December 2017.

Barack Obama appointed Janet Yellen in 2014 as President of the Federal Reserve (Fed), the US central bank. Joe Biden should make him his secretary of the treasury, according to the revelations of the Wall Street Journal confirmed by all the American press. At 74, this Keynesian economist will have the task of pulling the American economy out of the crisis caused by Covid-19: even if the year 2020 ends in a recession limited to 3.5% of GDP, only half of 22 million jobs destroyed in March and April have been recreated. Just as she was the first woman to lead the Fed, she will be the first to have control over the Treasury.

This choice is the result of a subtle balance organized by Joe Biden, who had to both satisfy the left of the Democratic Party while not frightening the business community and Wall Street. M’s choiceme Yellen, who filtered out quite late, is clever: with a woman of unparalleled skills and experience, the president-elect is silencing the claims of progressive Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren and reassuring business circles.

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Born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn originally from Poland, Mme Yellen is a labor market specialist, rooted on the left. Raised in a family where, according to the press, the memory of the Great Depression lingered, this Yale graduate scholar, wife of the 2001 Nobel Laureate in Economics, George Akerlof, with whom she wrote numerous articles, has always insisted on the need for full employment.

Janet Yellen was “a dove”, that is to say a supporter of an accommodating monetary policy, when she led the Fed, first from 2010 as vice president alongside Ben Bernanke in the aftermath of the financial crisis, then as president from 2014. And the facts have shown that she was right. At the time, the central bank had adopted a very aggressive policy to revive the economy with almost zero interest rates as well as unconventional methods, such as the repurchase of the debts of banks and companies to better finance them. The obsession with Mme Yellen was not to return to normal too quickly: it was necessary at all costs to avoid the Japanese-style scenario, that of an impossible economic recovery.

Thus the Fed made some premature attempts, with the end of the repurchases of securities attempted in 2013, then a beginning of a rise in rates, initiated under his presidency and continued by his successor Jerome Powell. But, in this decade, as Mme Yellen, getting back to normal was not the reasonable option, especially as the economy suffered a mini-relapse with the mid-decade oil crash.

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