mike777, on 2013-July-31, 18:48, said:
If you don't think Bernanke is an academic an academic with great power....then that pretty much ends the discussion. If we cannot at least agree that banking, wall street. govt and medicine is full of working academics....then that will end the discussion.
In the context of a current question:
1. Is Larry Summers an academic?
2. If so, is this a mark against him as Obama considers nominating him to take over from Bernanke?
With regard to 1. the Wik tells us:
Quote
But, of course, he has done a great many other things.
With regard to 2., I regard his accomplishments in the academic realm as a plus, not a minus.
We have, perhaps, come back to the original thread topic of inequality. The next Fed Chair will, just as they all do, make decisions that critically impact the very guts of our economic system.
There is a column today about Summers at
http://www.washingto...-larry-summers/
One part:
Quote
Summers rubs a lot of people the wrong way. But the part of Summers that rubs people the wrong way — or at least one part of Summers that rubs people the wrong way — is exactly what his admirers love about him. The experience of taking an idea to Summers, they say, is the experience of having the smartest person you’ve ever met focus intensely and seriously on what you just told them and then give you 10 reasons you never thought of for why it’s idiotic or won’t work or needs revision. And those 10 points are good points. And if you absorb them, and integrate them, you end up with something much better. The people who enjoy that process quickly come to rely on it as a necessary step in their work. Some people hate the Summers experience. But those who don’t find it exhilarating, even addicting. It breeds a loyalty far stronger than what’s typical in government. Summers’s supporters don’t just like him. They think he’s special, a once-in-a-generation mind that makes the minds around him better.
Are these the traits of an academic? Perhaps. But academics do not always have such traits, and non-academics, some of them, do have them.
A person comes as a package. Experience in academia may be part of the package. Being, at least in part, an academic is not a disease.
Or to put it differently: I am not at all sure whether Larry Summers should or should not be the next Chair of the Federal Reserve, but when I consider the pluses and minuses, I certainly don't regard his Professorship at Harvard as a minus.