Ben Bernanke
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Ben Bernanke (born December 13, 1953, Augusta, Georgia, U.S.) American economist who served as chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (“the Fed”), the central bank of the United States, from 2006 to 2014. In 2022 he and two other economists, Douglas Diamond and Philip Dybvig, were awarded the Nobel Prize for Economics (the Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel) for “research on banks and financial crises.” Bernanke, Diamond, and Dybvig were recognized by the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, which selects the winners of the Nobel Prize for Economics, for their insightful studies in the 1980s of the essential economic functions performed by banks, the vulnerability of banks to runs (i.e., massive withdrawals of funds by a bank’s depositors) during periods of financial panic, and the ways in which governments may improve the stability of banking systems and avert or properly manage financial crises. The laureates’ combined research forms the foundation of modern bank regulation.
Bernanke grew up in Dillon, South Carolina, where his father worked as a pharmacist and his mother as a teacher. He graduated summa cum laude in economics from Harvard University (1975) and earned a Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT; 1979). His first professorial appointment was at Stanford University, where he taught economics from 1979 to 1985. He became a full professor in 1985 when he moved to Princeton University, and he served as a visiting professor at both New York University and MIT. Widely published on a range of economic issues—including macroeconomics, monetary policy, the Great Depression, and business cycles—Bernanke was awarded both a Guggenheim and a Sloan fellowship, and in 2001 he became editor of the American Economic Review. The following year he was appointed to the Board of Governors of the Fed, and he became noted for thorough research and diplomacy when opinions among the governors differed. His political strengths were also evident in early 2005 when he was named chairman of the President’s Council of Economic Advisers.
In 2005 Bernanke was nominated by U.S. Pres. George W. Bush to succeed Alan Greenspan as chairman of the Fed. He took office on February 1, 2006. With his strong background in academia, Bernanke represented a clear break from previous Fed chairmen, who had usually come from Wall Street. While expected to uphold the style of fiscal management established by Greenspan, he brought certain important changes to the Fed, mainly in regard to inflation. Although his predecessor had rejected inflation targeting, Bernanke preferred a stated inflation objective, which he believed would bring about economic growth and stability. In September 2008 he worked with Bush and Secretary of the U.S. Department of the Treasury Henry Paulson to draft the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act, which aimed to protect the U.S. financial system during the subprime mortgage crisis, a severe contraction of liquidity in credit markets worldwide brought about by widespread losses in the subprime mortgage sector.
While the measures helped stabilize the banking industry, the overall economy struggled to improve, and Bernanke became the focus of much scrutiny. Although some credited him for averting disaster, others claimed that he and the Fed did little to prevent the crisis. His Senate hearings for a second term proved contentious, but in January 2010 he was confirmed, 70–30. After completing the term in 2014, Bernanke was succeeded by Janet Yellen. In the same year, Bernanke became a Distinguished Fellow in Residence at the Brookings Institution, a public-policy think tank.
Bernanke’s Nobel Prize-winning research focused on the causes and consequences of the Great Depression of the 1930s, the longest, most widespread, and most severe economic downturn in modern history. In a journal article published in 1983, “Nonmonetary Effects of the Financial Crisis in the Propagation of the Great Depression,” Bernanke argued that the primary cause of the Great Depression was the general inability of banks to fund productive investments through loans to businesses and consumers—the result of significant reductions in deposits by bank customers and the need of banks to retain money that could be demanded by depositors in future bank runs. Bernanke showed that widespread bank failures exacerbated the recession that had begun in 1929, transforming it into a severe and long-lasting depression. A major factor in this development, according to Bernanke, was the loss of information regarding the investment history and general creditworthiness of potential borrowers resulting from the failures of the banks with which they dealt. Such information usually takes years to accumulate and, in a context of large-scale bank failures, is not easily recovered by surviving lenders. Until it is, lending by banks is dampened and economic recovery is slowed. The accumulation of such information was and remains a crucially important function of the banking industry. Bernanke’s investigations made use of complementary research by Diamond and Dybvig, which explained how banks generate liquidity, thus making economic activity possible, by effectively transforming the savings of depositors into productive investments by long-term borrowers, and by Diamond, which explained how banks perform the crucial function of assessing the creditworthiness of potential borrowers by monitoring their debt repayments.
Bernanke’s tenure as head of the Federal Reserve coincided with the global financial crisis of 2007–08, which precipitated the Great Recession of 2007–09. The Academy cited the policies adopted by the Federal Reserve during that period, which helped to limit bank failures in the United States and to avert a global depression, as illustrative of the importance of the Nobel laureates’ work.
Bernanke contributed to a number of volumes on economics and in 2000 issued a compendium of his writings on the Great Depression. The Federal Reserve and the Financial Crisis (2013) collected a series of four lectures he had given in 2012 on the genesis and history of the Fed and on its efforts to address the 2008 financial meltdown. The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a Crisis and Its Aftermath (2015) documents his experiences as Fed chairman. Bernanke’s other books include 21st Century Monetary Policy: The Federal Reserve from the Great Inflation to COVID-19 (2022).