Larry Summers: The Wrong Person for World Bank President
Dean Baker, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Monday, 12 March 2012 15:28
http://www.cepr.net/index.php/blogs/cepr-blog/larry-summers-the-wrong-person-for-world-bank-president

Larry Summers is beginning to look more and more like the second
incarnation of Richard Nixon. He just keeps coming back.

According to the rumor mills and betting lines, Summers is now the top
contender for World Bank president. If track records mattered, Summers
would be nowhere in contention.

Just looking at the economics (i.e. ignoring his stormy tenure as
president of Harvard), Summers would not seem to be the sort of person
who should be given another position of responsibility. In the 90s,
Summers was a top advisor and eventually Treasury Secretary in the
Clinton administration as it rushed full speed down the road of
financial deregulation. He was among the loud voices dismissing then
head of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission Brooksley Born’s
concerns about unregulated derivatives.

Summers was also a central figure in the engineering of the bailout
from the East Asian financial crisis. This bailout sent the dollar and
the trade deficit soaring. The resulting build up of reserves by
developing countries created the fundamental imbalance in the U.S. and
world economy, which still has not been corrected.

Summers completely bought into the Great Moderation myth that Alan
Greenspan had somehow ended economic instability for all time. At the
famous Greenspanfest held at Jackson Hole in 2005, Summers derided the
skeptics as financial “Luddites.”

Just as there was supposedly a new Dick Nixon running for president in
1968 there was supposedly a new Larry Summers who entered the Obama
administration as head of the National Economic Council in 2009.
Summers had supposedly learned his lessons and recognized that giving
Wall Street complete free rein may not always be the best policy.

There is not much evidence of the new Larry Summers in the policy
decisions of the Obama administration. While exactly who said what and
when is hotly contested in the various accounts coming out now about
the administration’s economic policy, the basic facts are not in
dispute.

The administration left the financial sector largely intact. Huge too
big to fail banks that were almost certainly insolvent (e.g. Citigroup
and Bank of America) were nursed back to something resembling health
with massive amounts of government assistance. The Obama
administration blocked efforts to close or break up these behemoths.

The Obama administration pushed through a stimulus package that was
clearly too small to restore the economy to health and then began
touting the green shoots of recovery and saying that deficit reduction
would now be its priority. As a result, millions of workers are
needlessly unemployed and unable to care properly for themselves or
their families.

We may never know exactly how much of the blame for these failures
should rest on Larry Summers’ shoulders, but it is hard to believe
that the head of the National Economic Council, the person who is
supposed to summarize all the relevant views for the president,
doesn’t have some responsibility.

In short, Summers’ record as an economic adviser has provided a trail
of disasters that few can match. Does it make sense to give him yet
another opportunity to do even more damage?

--
Robert Naiman
Policy Director
Just Foreign Policy
www.justforeignpolicy.org
[email protected]
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