Council of Economic Advisers
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1946 |
Preceding agencies | |
Headquarters | Eisenhower Executive Office Building |
Employees | About 35 |
Agency executives |
|
Parent agency | Executive Office of the President of the United States |
Website | Council of Economic Advisers |
The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) is an agency within the Executive Office of the President that advises the President of the United States on economic policy.[2] The CEA provides much of the objective empirical research for the White House and prepares the annual Economic Report of the President.
Organization
The current Chairman of the CEA is Jason Furman, who was appointed by President Obama on June 10, 2013.[3] The two current Members are Jay Shambaugh and Sandra Black.
The council's Chairman is nominated by the president and approved by the United States Senate. The Members are appointed by the president. The staff of the council consists of a Chief of Staff as well as about 20 academic economists, plus three permanent economic statisticians.
History
The council was established by the Employment Act of 1946 to provide presidents with objective economic analysis and advice on the development and implementation of a wide range of domestic and international economic policy issues. In its first seven years the CEA made five technical advances in policy making, including the replacement of a "cyclical model" of the economy by a "growth model," the setting of quantitative targets for the economy, use of the theories of fiscal drag and full-employment budget, recognition of the need for greater flexibility in taxation, and replacement of the notion of unemployment as a structural problem by a realization of a low aggregate demand.[4]
In 1949 a dispute broke out between Chairman Edwin Nourse and member Leon Keyserling. Nourse believed a choice had to be made between "guns or butter" but Keyserling argued that an expanding economy permitted large defense expenditures without sacrificing an increased standard of living. In 1949 Keyserling gained support from powerful Truman advisors Dean Acheson and Clark Clifford. Nourse resigned as chairman, warning about the dangers of budget deficits and increased funding of "wasteful" defense costs. Keyserling succeeded to the chairmanship and influenced Truman's Fair Deal proposals and the economic sections of National Security Council Resolution 68 that, in April 1950, asserted that the larger armed forces America needed would not affect living standards or risk the "transformation of the free character of our economy."[5]
During the 1953–54 recession, the CEA, headed by Arthur Burns deployed non-traditional neo-keynesian interventions, which provided results later called the "steady fifties" wherein many families stayed in the economic "middleclass" with just one family wage-earner. The Eisenhower Administration supported an activist contracyclical approach that helped to establish Keynesianism as a possible bipartisan economic policy for the nation. Especially important in formulating the CEA response to the recession—accelerating public works programs, easing credit, and reducing taxes—were Arthur F. Burns and Neil H. Jacoby.[6]
The 1978 Humphrey–Hawkins Act required each administration to move toward full employment and reasonable price stability within a specific time period. It has made CEA's annual economic report highly political in nature, as well as highly unreliable and inaccurate over the standard two or five year projection periods.[7]
Chairs and Members
List of Chairs
Officeholder | Term start | Term end | President |
---|---|---|---|
Edwin G. Nourse | August 9, 1946 | November 1, 1949 | Harry Truman |
Leon Keyserling Acting: 1949–1950 |
November 2, 1949 | January 20, 1953 | |
Arthur F. Burns | March 19, 1953 | December 1, 1956 | Dwight Eisenhower |
Raymond J. Saulnier | December 3, 1956 | January 20, 1961 | |
Walter Heller | January 29, 1961 | November 15, 1964 | John F. Kennedy |
Lyndon Johnson | |||
Gardner Ackley | November 16, 1964 | February 15, 1968 | |
Arthur M. Okun | February 15, 1968 | January 20, 1969 | |
Paul W. McCracken | February 4, 1969 | December 31, 1971 | Richard Nixon |
Herbert Stein | January 1, 1972 | August 31, 1974 | |
Gerald Ford | |||
Alan Greenspan | September 4, 1974 | January 20, 1977 | |
Charles Schultze | January 22, 1977 | January 20, 1981 | Jimmy Carter |
Murray Weidenbaum | February 27, 1981 | August 25, 1982 | Ronald Reagan |
Martin Feldstein | October 14, 1982 | July 10, 1984 | |
Beryl W. Sprinkel | April 18, 1985 | January 20, 1989 | |
Michael J. Boskin | February 2, 1989 | January 20, 1993 | George H. W. Bush |
Laura Tyson | February 5, 1993 | February 21, 1995 | Bill Clinton |
Joseph Stiglitz | June 28, 1995 | February 13, 1997 | |
Janet Yellen | February 18, 1997 | August 3, 1999 | |
Martin N. Baily | August 12, 1999 | January 20, 2001 | |
Glenn Hubbard | May 11, 2001 | February 28, 2003 | George W. Bush |
Greg Mankiw | May 29, 2003 | February 18, 2005 | |
Harvey S. Rosen | February 23, 2005 | June 10, 2005 | |
Ben Bernanke | June 21, 2005 | January 31, 2006 | |
Edward Lazear | February 27, 2006 | January 20, 2009 | |
Christina Romer | January 28, 2009 | September 3, 2010 | Barack Obama |
Austan Goolsbee | September 10, 2010 | August 5, 2011 | |
Alan Krueger | November 7, 2011 | August 2, 2013 | |
Jason Furman | August 2, 2013 | present |
List of Members
- John D. Clark 1946–1953
- Roy Blough 1950–1952
- Leon Keyserling 1950–1953
- Robert C. Turner 1952–1953
- Karl A. Fox 1953–1955
- Neil H. Jacoby 1953–1955
- Walter W. Stewart 1953–1955
- Joseph S. Davis 1955–1958
- Paul W. McCracken 1956–1959
- Karl Brandt 1958–1961
- Henry C. Wallich 1959–1961
- James Tobin 1961–1962
- Kermit Gordon 1961–1962
- John P. Lewis 1963–1964
- Otto Eckstein 1964–1966
- James S. Duesenberry 1966–1968
- Merton J. Peck 1968–1969
- Warren L. Smith 1968–1969
- Hendrik S. Houthakker 1969–1971
- Herbert Stein 1969–1971
- Ezra Solomon 1971–1973
- Marina von Neumann Whitman 1972–1973
- Gary L. Seevers 1973–1975
- William J. Fellner 1973–1975
- Paul. W. MacAvoy 1975–1976
- Burton G. Malkiel 1975–1977
- William D. Nordhaus 1977–1979
- Lyle E. Gramley 1977–1980
- George C. Eads 1979–1981
- Stephen Goldfeld 1980–1981
- William A. Niskanen 1981–1985
- Jerry L. Jordan 1981–1982
- William Poole 1982–1985
- Thomas Gale Moore 1985–1989
- Michael L. Mussa 1986–1988
- John B. Taylor 1989–1991
- Richard L. Schmalensee 1989–1991
- David F. Bradford 1991–1993
- Paul Wonnacott 1991–1993
- Alan S. Blinder 1993–1994
- Joseph Stiglitz 1993–1995
- Martin N. Baily 1995–1996
- Alicia H. Munnell 1996–1997
- Jeffrey A. Frankel 1997–1999
- Rebecca M. Blank 1998–1999
- Robert Z. Lawrence 1999–2001
- Kathryn L. Shaw 2000–2001
- Mark B. McClellan 2001–2002
- Randall S. Kroszner 2001–2003
- Kristin J. Forbes 2003–2005
- Harvey S. Rosen 2003–2005
- Katherine Baicker 2005–2007
- Matthew J. Slaughter 2005–2007
- Donald B. Marron Jr. 2008–2009
- Cecilia Rouse 2009–2011
- Carl Shapiro 2011–2012
- Katharine Abraham 2011–2013
- James H. Stock 2013–2014
- Betsey Stevenson 2013–2015
- Maurice Obstfeld 2014–2015
References
- 1 2
- ↑ Council of Economic Advisers
- ↑ "Obama names Furman as new White House chief economist", Reuters, 2013-06-10
- ↑ Salant 1973
- ↑ Brune 1989
- ↑ Engelbourg 1980
- ↑ Cimbala and Stout 1983
Sources
- Brazelton, W. Robert (2001), Designing U.S. Economic Policy: An Analytical Biography of Leon H. Keyserling, New York: Palgrave, ISBN 0-333-77575-9
- Brazelton, W. Robert (1997), "The Economics of Leon Hirsch Keyserling", Journal of Economic Perspectives, 11 (4): 189–197, doi:10.1257/jep.11.4.189, ISSN 0895-3309
- Brune, Lester H. (1989), "Guns and Butter: the Pre-Korean War Dispute over Budget Allocations: Nourse's Conservative Keynesianism Loses Favor Against Keyserling's Economic Expansion Plan", The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 48 (3): 357–371, doi:10.1111/j.1536-7150.1989.tb03189.x, ISSN 0002-9246
- Cimbala, Stephen J.; Stout, Robert L. (1983), "The Economic Report of the President: Before and after the Full Employment and Balanced Growth Act of 1978", Presidential Studies Quarterly, 13 (1): 50–61, ISSN 0360-4918
- Eizenstat, Stuart E. (1992), "Economists and White House Decisions", Journal of Economic Perspectives, 6 (3): 65–71, doi:10.1257/jep.6.3.65, ISSN 0895-3309
- Engelbourg, Saul (1980), "The Council of Economic Advisers and the Recession of 1953-1954", Business History Review, 54 (2): 192–214, doi:10.2307/3114480, ISSN 0007-6805, JSTOR 3114480
- Leeson, Robert (1997), "The Political Economy of the Inflation-unemployment Trade-off", History of Political Economy, 29 (1): 117–156, doi:10.1215/00182702-29-1-117, ISSN 0018-2702
- McCaleb, Thomas S. (1986), "The Council of Economic Advisers after Forty Years", Cato Journal, 6 (2): 685–693, ISSN 0273-3072
- Norton, Hugh S. (1977), The Employment Act and the Council of Economic Advisers, 1946-1976, Columbia: University of South Carolina Press, ISBN 0-87249-296-6
- Salant, Walter S. (1973), "Some Intellectual Contributions of the Truman Council of Economic Advisers to Policy-making", History of Political Economy, 5 (1): 36–49, doi:10.1215/00182702-5-1-36, ISSN 0018-2702
- Sobel, Robert (1988), Biographical Directory of the Council of Economic A dvisers, New York: Greenwood Press, ISBN 0-313-22554-0
- Tobin, James; Weidenbaum, Murray, eds. (1988), Two Revolutions in Economic Policy: The First Economic Reports of Presidents Kennedy and Reagan, Cambridge: MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-70034-4
- Wehrle, Edmund F. (2004), "Guns, Butter, Leon Keyserling, the AFL-CIO, and the Fate of Full-employment Economics", Historian, 66 (4): 730–748, doi:10.1111/j.1540-6563.2004.00094.x, ISSN 0018-2370
External links
- Council of Economic Advisers home page
- Records of the Office of the Council of Economic Advisors, 1953-61, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
- Papers of Arthur F. Burns, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library
- Papers of Raymond J. Saulnier, Dwight D. Eisenhower Presidential Library