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Obama's economist pick seen as sign of new agenda

Tue Dec 28, 2010 3:06 AM EST
us-news, business, politics, us, obama, white-house, barack-obama, economist
Julie Pace, Associated Press
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showing 1 of 3 photos
<p>FILE - In this Oct, 1, 2010 file photo-outgoing National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers is seen in the East Room of the White House in Washington. Among the first announcements President Barack Obama will make upon returning from his Hawaiian vacation is his choice for director of the National Economic Council, widely regarded as the president’s top economist. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)</p>

FILE - In this Oct, 1, 2010 file photo-outgoing National Economic Council Director Lawrence Summers is seen in the East Room of the White House in Washington. Among the first announcements President Barack Obama will make upon returning from his Hawaiian vacation is his choice for director of the National Economic Council, widely regarded as the president’s top economist. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File)

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HONOLULU — Change is soon coming to the White House economic team, with President Barack Obama set to announce a new top adviser who will have broad influence over the administration's efforts to jumpstart the struggling economy.

Obama is expected to announce a replacement for departing National Economic Council director Lawrence Summers early in the new year, soon after he returns to Washington from his Hawaiian vacation. The president's choice is being closely watched for signs of where he wants to take his economic agenda in the second half of his term, and how he looks to bring down the almost double-digit unemployment rate.

Will he tap the business world with a figure such as Roger Altman, an investment banker and Clinton administration alumnus who might carry too much baggage from his association with Wall Street? Will he turn to academia instead, calling on a scholar such Yale President Richard Levin? Or will he go with deeply experienced insiders such as deficit hawk Gene Sperling at the Treasury Department or Jason Furman, the council's deputy director?

With the unemployment rate at 9.8 percent, the private sector struggling to maintain steady growth and the public ranking the economy as the top concern, Obama's handling of the issue over the coming months is certain to play a central role in his expected reelection bid.

The selection process for the council post has dragged on for months. Summers announced his resignation in September, and many in the administration knew well before then that he planned to return to Harvard University after serving two years at the White House.

Obama spokesman Robert Gibbs said he expects Obama to make an announcement in early January, and blamed any delay on the frenzied legislative session that consumed the White House through the end of the year.

"The president wants to take some time to make a good decision because...we have had a lot on our plates the last couple weeks," Gibbs said Sunday.

The administration's thinking on how to fill the job has evolved since Summers announced his resignation. The initial view — both inside and outside the White House — was that Obama should name a business leader to the post, in an attempt to give the private sector a greater voice in the administration and ease the perception that the president is anti-business.

But the administration now believes the relationship between Obama and the business community has started to thaw. For example, both sides praised each other following Obama's meeting with CEOs earlier this month. The White House has grown more willing to find another prominent job for a private sector appointee while leaving the council post to an economic heavyweight who can coordinate the advice Obama is receiving from throughout the administration.

"To get a business person in there, it seems like an odd place," said Dean Baker, co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. "And if he does need someone from business, I don't think he would want someone from Wall Street."

It's that Wall Street connection that's been a knock against one of the leading candidates for the job, Altman, founder of Evercore Partners. Altman does have government experience, though, having served as deputy treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton.

Sperling, another top contender, has also dabbled in Wall Street, advising Goldman Sachs and other financial firms, although he's most well-known for his work in the Clinton and Obama administrations, including his current post as counselor to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner. Sperling helped craft the 1993 Deficit Reduction Act, and his appointment could show Obama is serious about his pledge to address the mounting debt and deficit next year.

Levin, who as president of Yale shares Summers' academic pedigree, is likely to favor stepped up Wall Street regulation. Furman is also said to be in the running for a promotion from the deputy's job.

Both Sperling and Furman would bring an insider's knowledge of the Obama White House and the president's economic policies to the job, attributes that may not necessarily be to their benefit. Critics have accused Obama's economic advisers of not fully grasping the depths of the crisis, and the team's prediction that the president's massive stimulus bill would keep unemployment below 8 percent has caused headaches within the administration.

Selecting an outsider to fill the top economic job would help Obama counter the notion that he's too insular and unwilling to accept advice from outside the administration. He filled two other high-profile vacancies on his economic team this year from within the administration, replacing Budget Director Peter Orszag with State Department official Jacob Lew, and Council of Economic Advisers chair Christina Romer with Austan Goolsbee, who was serving as a member of the council.

"They should be looking to take things in a new direction," Baker said. "I don't think more of the same is the answer."

Beyond the economic qualifications of the candidates he's considering, the president is also believed to be looking for a council director who can serve as both a good manager and a team player. For all of Summers' intellectual heft, he brought along a healthy ego and an often prickly temperament. Rumors swirled of conflict among Summers, Orszag and Romer, a rarity in a White House run by a president with little patience for drama.

© 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (9)
Sally - Snoopy's Sister

I think the president should continue taking vacations, don't you? He has no bills. Why not.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 7:53 AM EST
Sally - Snoopy's Sister

A man!

Yes!

We'll do well I am sure of it. Just as we have historically over the last two centuries of Presidential ingenuity and balanced budgets!

Yippee!

I am so very much looking forward to this you have no idea and I can't wait to tell my neighbors. In fact, I think I'll get on the phone right now and call Melissa - no wait - I'll text her! Darn!

Can't - Got no money!

Could it be because of the last man that was our "top economist"and his speculation for the future?

USA! :]

  • 1 vote
Reply#2 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 8:06 AM EST
Burlap Mudflap

Just get someone that can get this boat off the rocks and be quick about it

    Reply#3 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 10:02 AM EST
    Sally - Snoopy's Sister

    Would you still want that boat, though?

      #3.1 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 3:00 PM EST
      Reply
      conservative10

      Why is Lawrence Summers leaving? If the economy is well on it's way to recovery, as many here on Newsvine try to point out, why replace him? I'm mean he is doing a good job right( the economy is recovering)? So did he leave Obama's staff for other reasons?(like a rat jumping off the sinking ship)

      • 2 votes
      Reply#4 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 12:09 PM EST
      liberalism is a lie

      I just hope his "new direction" is better than his current direction, because his current direction is heading straight for a huge cliff...

      • 3 votes
      Reply#5 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 2:40 PM EST
      iroquis

      Levin has a sound history with great connections in China, a proven commitment to community, with his efforts to revitalize New Haven, an agressive financial aid program. He has shown commitment to environmental protections.

      Wall Street will probably get the nomination, if history is a guide. Our Middle Class has been cut out of the equation, America is now just a resource to be plundered.

        Reply#6 - Tue Dec 28, 2010 5:32 PM EST
        drrichardpaul

        I know this, every time we have appointed some person from Goldman Sachs to that position, this country has hurt even worse from them taking money and giving it to their buddies. A good example is the scam of the AIG bail out. 800 Billion over the weekend and couldn't tell the American people why, just that they needed it or the economy would be hurting. Guess what folks, it's hurting anyway. Do you know where most of that money ended up? Most of that money was eventually funneled to Goldman Sachs. 

        We really need to start enforcing to anti- monopoly laws again. I think that's part of the problem here. We have too many companies that are too close to being monopolies. Take for example Comcast. Yes, we have other cable companies, and yes they are diversified, but they are too big to fail. The whole point of the anti- monopoly laws was to make sure that companies weren't too big to fail.  Of course this would mean that people would have to be more diversified in their portfolios, and that globalization would necessarily take a huge blow, because it would also mean that Free Trade would have to be taken off the table, and the import tariffs would have to be greatly increased back to the 1970's standards. This would hurt a lot of businesses that currently make cheaper products and sell them here for an increased profit. Wow, that would also mean that companies might even consider bringing manufacturing jobs back. Imagine that, something that everyone, except the extremely greedy can agree with.

        • 1 vote
        Reply#7 - Wed Dec 29, 2010 9:12 AM EST
        sdgrtuiy76Deleted
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