SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Logain Ablar who wrote (24725)3/27/1999 10:09:00 AM
From: Narotham Reddy  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50167
 
U.S Treasury Secretary to be replaced ?

By Erin Arvedlund
ABCNEWS.com from TheStreet.com

Who will succeed Robert Rubin as treasury secretary?

Rumors swirled again this week that Rubin was on the verge of
retiring, and the odds-on favorite to fill the boyish, politically savvy
secretary's shoes is none other than his deputy secretary, Lawrence
Summers.

The 44-year-old Summers is seen as Rubin's natural replacement,
having played a leading role in financial-rescue plans for Mexico,
Russia and countries in Asia.
"Those two are like Batman and Robin" in terms of working on
ideas, says Allen Jacobson, economist and senior vice president of
HSBC Washington Analysis.
"Rubin gets a lot of ideas from Summers, who acts as a sort of brain
trust at Treasury on issues such as Social Security, Japan's need for
fiscal belt-tightening and the possibility of forcing the Japanese central
bank to monetize their debt."

No Time like the Present
A political appointee, Rubin was named the 70th treasury secretary in
1995 by President Clinton. His term expires in June 2000. A former
co-chairman at Goldman Sachs & Co., Rubin has earned praise from
Democrats and Republicans alike, as well as from Wall Street.
Though Rubin, 60, is in good health, his wife never liked
Washington D.C., and few believe he wants to stay on until Clinton
leaves office.

If he wanted to leave, "the pressure would be on for him to do it
sooner rather than later," says one Washington, D.C., economist who
requested anonymity. "The market is calm right now, and we're over
the hump in emerging markets like Brazil."
"Rubin is not going to be there much longer," says Jacobson.

Summers the Likely Choice...
All signs point to Summers as the frontrunner. He recently made the
cover of Time magazine, along with Rubin and Fed Chairman Alan
Greenspan, leaving the impression that the Clinton administration was
angling to position him as top Treasury dog.
"Summers is far ahead as a frontrunner," Jacobson says. "He and
Rubin get along extremely well, and Rubin is the president's favorite.
So if Rubin wants Summers [as a successor], there's really not
anyone else."
Though Rubin declined to comment about a potential successor at a
press conference Wednesday, political analysts say it's an open
secret that Rubin hopes his deputy gets the nod.
The secretary very much wants a successor who will follow through
on Treasury's key initiatives, like maintaining a strong dollar,
supporting the International Monetary Fund and working for open,
stable international markets.

...But Not the Only Candidate
Still, Summers' confirmation by Congress is not a sure thing. While
he's widely recognized as a brilliant economist, "he's rubbed a lot of
people the wrong way," says Dean Baker, a senior research fellow at
both the Preamble Center think tank and the Century Foundation.

Summers "is a very brash character, and sometimes acts like
people don't know what they're talking about," Baker adds. Moreover,
Summers may have a difficult time justifying Treasury's support for the
disastrous IMF bailout of Russia last summer to the Republican
majority in Congress.
And when he worked at the World Bank earlier in his career,
Summers played a key role in designing the assistance programs for
some of the very countries that now find themselves caught up in the
global economic meltdown.