Last week, Associated Press ran a piece profiling several potential candidates for the next Treasury Secretary. The candidates had one feature in common with all prior Treasury Secretaries, they are all white men. This fact is especially egregious because one of the most obviously qualified candidates is a woman: Sheila Bair, the current Chairperson the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
During ordinary times, the FDIC is a relative backwater, having to deal with minor policy tweaks or the failure of a small bank here or there. However, the housing crash has put the FDIC at center stage. Ms. Bair has been forced to arrange the takeover or merger of many of the country’s largest banks, including Wachovia, Washington Mutual, and IndyMac. The FDIC has been a key actor in containing the credit crisis.
In this process, Bair has shown a willingness to both confront the big Wall Street banks and to stand up for homeowners. When the FDIC took over IndyMac, one of the mass market subprime lenders, Bair ordered a moratorium on foreclosures on the mortgages held by the bank. She announced that the FDIC would arrange write-downs that allowed homeowners to stay in their home wherever possible. Bair has since been vocal in her criticisms of other banks for being unwilling to take the same steps.
Bair is a Republican, but in the world of Big Finance it is not clear that party affiliation makes much difference. Most of the public will probably care more about the fact that she has managed to steer clear of the Wall Street cesspool than whether she is a Democrat or Republican.
If Sheila Bair’s name is not on the Obama transition team’s short-list for Treasury Secretary, then he needs a new transition team.



20 Comments




Well, Jim Cramer hates her – and that might be enough for me.
Blair’s been great and not only the boyz of the fed but the media ignores her as well. She quesioned the bailout(s) and there was basically “crickets” as the response.
FWIW, I don’t think Kramer is always wrong, but he sure was here. Jim Kramer: “Bear Stearns is fine”
Thanks Dean.
Let’s hope this link takes you directly to the youtube Bear Stearns is fine
I saw Bair on Charlie Rose this week. She seemed reasonable and knowledgeable, but most of what she had to say when she got very technical was way over my head.
thanks dean. i don’t know blair but will now keep an eye out for her.
btw, what’s brooksley born up to nowadays?
Did y’all see the article about “Government Sachs” in the Sunday NYT?
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10…..ref=slogin
thanks. here’s the link to blair on charlie rose.
btw, i notice that paulson is scheduled to be on rose tonight.
no, thank you for the link, i think. am only part way though and am already about to blow a gasket.
Here’s my favorite sentence from the article:
Christy up at the Silo
Why am I not surprised? This is about getting as much dough in the hands of the cronies, not resolving any financial crisis. They’re not interested in resolving a public financial crisis, only a private one.
You betcha.
Bair is in the same position as Brooksley Born was.
And FWIW, “It’s not over till the fat lady sings“
Little Sarah has unwittingly given us a new snarky cliche, doncha know.
Just finished reading the link and it’s kinda amazing that in the 4 pages the MLEC wasn’t brought up once.
No girls in the tranches; pun intended. They might ask tough questions.
http://books.google.com/books?…..#PPA296,M1
Brooksley E. Born, was the former head of the CFTC and was mentioned prominently in a NYT article as someone who tried to oppose Greenspan by supporting derivatives regulation. But because she wasn’t one of the boys she was ignored and is now working for a law firm.
She is someone who should be on the Obama economics team.
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10…..#038;scp=1
I’ve been aware of Bair for about a year and she seems sensible and much better than the other players in this crisis.
She doesn’t talk like the other Bushies, but she’s also adept at speaking blandly like a bureaucrat. One would have to look at more detail of her performance and then wonder if she shouldn’t remain at FDIC. All-in-all it seems she should at least be on the list for consideration.
I’d also like one of my former governors, Gaston Caperton, to be looked at for Education Sec. He’s devoted a lot to education since leaving office.
I’ve mentioned some other names for cabinet positions before, so I won’t repeat them.