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WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 2009
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 OPINION 
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'Quiet Radical' Bernanke Reinvents Fed

Low-key chair deserves chance to stay on, clean up: Ignatius

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(Newser) – Barack Obama has a huge decision coming up this summer: whether to reappoint Ben Bernanke as chairman of the Fed or turn to obvious challenger Lawrence Summers. If he’s smart, he’ll stick with the soft-spoken incumbent, writes David Ignatius of the Washington Post. “He has been a veritable tiger,” he writes. “The Bernanke Fed is so much more powerful than its predecessors that it’s almost a different institution.”

Bernanke erected what Ignatius calls “jury-rigged rescue programs” to pump confidence into the economy because, he tells the columnist, the financial crisis resembled an old-fashioned 19th-century bank panic. New information revealed that assets weren’t as safe as investors had believed, so they ran for the exits. Obama will want a Fed chairman who can clean up those hastily erected structures. Maybe it’s Summers. “But there’s a strong argument for not changing what looks like a winning team.”

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.   (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.   (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke listens to a question as he testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke listens to a question as he testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, May 5, 2009.   (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)
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