Bernanke's Impossible Dilemma

David Wessel

Imagine the challenge Ben Bernanke faces. 

His goal is to provide full employment and price stability.  Yet he faces a slowly growing economy, unemployment close to 10%, consumers deleveraging and spending frugally, renewed fears of banking system instability, and the threat of an asset bubble is growing somewhere in the markets.  Monetary and fiscal policy options have been seemingly exhausted, and the public is losing confidence in all aspects of government.

How Bernanke might address those challenges was the focus of a keynote address by David Wessel at last week’s Financial Planning Association conference in Denver.  Wessel is the economics editor of The Wall Street Journal and the author of In Fed We Trust, a study of Bernanke’s handling of the recent crisis.

Wessel considers Bernanke a hero for his handling of the crisis, but he offered few words of optimism when discussing how the Fed chairman might tackle the problems now confronting him.  I’ll review Wessel’s assessment of the likely path of Fed policy, but first let’s look what earned Bernanke the “hero” accolade.

Bernanke’s handling of the crisis

When Milton Friedman turned ninety years old, Wessel said, there was a birthday party for him at the University of Chicago.  Bernanke, who was then a governor at the Federal Reserve, spoke to Friedman. “You’re right,” the current chairman is said to have told the great economist. “The Great Depression was our fault. Because of you, we won’t do it again.”

That conviction to avoid a repeat of the 1930s explains many of Bernanke’s actions in the current crisis.

Bernanke served as George W. Bush’s Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors, eventually succeeding Alan Greenspan as Fed chair.  Bernanke’s expertise on the Depressions was a non-factor in his selection for the post, according to Wessel.  Bush wanted a safe choice that would easily win approval, having just failed in his nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court.

After a largely uneventful first year as Fed Chairman, Bernanke and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson entered a stage that Wessel called “the great denial.”    “They didn’t understand what was happening to the economy and to the housing market, particularly at the end of 2007,” Wessel said.  “They had, what you might call, a failure of imagination.” That failure was, of course, their ignorance of the bet being made across global financial markets that housing prices would never go down.