Since nothing less than the fate of the free world depended on the judgment of Ben Bernanke, I thought I?d touch base with David Wessel, the Wall Street Journal economics editor, who published In Fed We Trust: Ben Bernanke?s War on the Great Panic.
I doubted David could tell me anything more about the former Princeton professor I didn?t already know. I couldn?t have been more wrong, as David gave me some fascinating insights into the inner soul of our much-vaunted Chairman of the Federal Reserve.
Bernanke was the smartest kid in rural Dillon, South Carolina, who, through a series of improbable accidents, and intervention by a local black civil rights leader, ended up at Harvard.
He built his career on studying the Great Depression, then the closest thing to paleontology economics had to offer, a field focused so distantly on the past that it was irrelevant.
Bernanke took over the Fed when Greenspan was considered a rock star, inhaling his libertarian, free-market, Ayn Rand inspired philosophy in great giant gulps.
Within a year the economy had suddenly transported itself back to the Jurassic Age, and the landscape was suddenly overrun with T-Rex?s and Brontosauri. He tried to stop the panic 150 different ways, 125 of which were terrible ideas, the remaining 25 saving us from the Great Depression II. This is why unemployment is now only 5%? instead of 25%.
The Fed governor is naturally a very shy and withdrawing person and would have been quite happy limiting his political career to the Princeton, NJ school board.
To rebuild confidence, he took his campaign to the masses, attending town hall meetings and pressing the flesh like a campaigning first term congressman.
The price tag for Ben?s success has been large, with the Fed balance sheet exploding from $800 million to $4 trillion, solely on his signature. The true cost of the financial crisis won?t be known for a decade or more.
The biggest risk is that we grow complacent, having pulled back from the brink and let desperately needed reforms of the financial system and the rebuilding of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac slide.
Ben Bernanke?s legacy will be defined by how well his successor, my friend, Janet Yellen, does her job. Unwind the bubble too soon and we go back into a real depression. Too late and hyperinflation hits.
That?s when we find out who Ben Bernanke really was.