"Take the case of Alan Blinder. Though he's squarely within the mainstream
and considered one of the great economic minds of his generation, he lasted
a mere year and a half as vice chairman of the Fed, leaving in January 1996.

Rob Johnson, who watched the Blinder ordeal, says Blinder made the mistake
of behaving as if the Fed was a place where competing ideas and assumptions
were debated. "Sociologically, what was happening was the Fed staff was
really afraid of Blinder. At some level, as an applied empirical economist,
Alan Blinder is really brilliant," says Johnson.

In closed-door meetings, Blinder did what so few do: challenged assumptions.
"The Fed staff would come out and their ritual is: Greenspan has kind of
told them what to conclude and they produce studies in which they conclude
this. And Blinder treated it more like an open academic debate when he first
got there and he'd come out and say, 'Well, that's not true. If you change
this assumption and change this assumption and use this kind of assumption
you get a completely different result.' And it just created a stir
inside--it was sort of like the whole pipeline of
Greenspan-arriving-at-decisions was disrupted."

It didn't sit well with Greenspan or his staff. "A lot of senior
staff...were pissed off about Blinder -- how should we say? -- not playing
by the customs that they were accustomed to," Johnson says."

 
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/07/priceless-how-the-federal_n_278805
.html>
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/09/07/priceless-how-the-federal_n_278805.
html

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