Steve Clemons
Posted November 8, 2008 | 07:29 AM (EST)
Who Wasn't On Stage With Obama and Should Have Been?
I'm not satisfied with the roster of economic personalities and thinkers we see Barack Obama mixing with.
I realize that there are a lot of players behind the scenes and those who walked out on stage (list below) are symbolic of clusters of other people and thinkers -- though every time I see Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers in the same group, it reminds me of the UK and France on the P-5 at the UN Security Council. Do we really need two European members in the same permanent body? Do we really need both Rubin and Summers at every meeting with press availability?
Below I have provided the roster of names who stood on stage with President-elect Obama yesterday at his first post election press conference.
But some who were missing who Obama should build in -- some are not now advisers and some are.
First of all, Jason Fuhrman and Austan Goolsbee are clearly going to be important parts of Obama's economic team. Goolsbee is rumored to be the likely shoe-in for Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisors. He really should be on stage too given that possibility and his influence in Obama's economic thinking. Fuhrman as well.
But beyond the obvious, I would like to see George Soros, Warren Buffet and Bill Gates on stage.
Soros not only predicted the global financial meltdown but wrote an entire book about it - and gave early warnings about needing to create new mechanisms to deal with credit default swaps -- which he called a "Damocles sword" hanging over the head of the entire global financial system -- earlier this year. Soros should be playing a bigger role in economic policy sculpting, and he shouldn't be in the background.
We know that Buffet is talking with Obama. But I'd include Bill Gates who understands the importance of investing in high multiplier economic infrastructure as opposed to investments that yield few long term positive recurring results.
I'd like to see Paul Krugman, Joseph Stiglitz, Jeffrey Sachs, James Galbraith, Leo Hindery, Clyde Prestowitz, Charlene Barshefsky, C. Fred Bergsten, Adam Posen, Robert Kuttner, Robert Samuelson, Alan Murray, William Bonvillian, Doug & Heidi Rediker, Bernard Schwartz, Tom Gallagher, Sheila Bair, Sherle Schwenninger, and Kevin Phillips added to a discussion group on the economy. It would be far more diverse, less predictable, genuinely interesting and produce greater policy option possibilities than the quite "regal" group on stage.
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http://www.huffingtonpost.com/steve-clemons/who-wasnt-on-stage-with-o_b_142314.html