An ode to Janet Yellen

On October 9, 2013, President Barack Obama announced that he would nominate Federal Reserve vice chair Janet Yellen to be the next head of the central bank.

“I’m absolutely confident that she will be an exceptional chair of the Federal Reserve,” Obama said.

This prediction turned out to be correct.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen will be remembered fondly by markets and economists for seeing the economy through the end of an unprecedented time in the Federal Reserve’s history. Yellen’s four-year term as Fed chair ends on Feb. 3, 2018. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)
Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen will be remembered fondly by markets and economists for seeing the economy through the end of an unprecedented time in the Federal Reserve’s history. Yellen’s four-year term as Fed chair ends on Feb. 3, 2018. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin)

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the third time in 2017 and the fifth time since the crisis. Each of these rate hikes occurred during Yellen’s time as chair. Additionally, the unemployment rate is at 17-year low, stocks are at a record high, and most economists see the U.S. entering the 2020s without another recession.

And with Yellen’s time at the top of the Federal Reserve set to end in February, it is clear that her tenure at the central bank has been a resounding success. The economy is doing as well as it has since the financial crisis and the market’s faith in the Yellen Fed has only grown through time.

But when Yellen — a veteran of the Federal Reserve system who served as president of the San Francisco Fed and as vice chair before taking the top job from Ben Bernanke — took over as Fed chair, the economic scars of the financial crisis were a fresh memory for markets and the public.

In late 2013, The Atlantic wrote that Yellen would be “inheriting a job that has never been as important as it is right now.” So for the first female chair in the history of the Federal Reserve, there was little doubt about how high the stakes would be.

And the path to success for the Yellen Fed was filled with obstacles, both known and unknown.

Upon assuming office Yellen’s task was clear — return Fed policies to something resembling the pre-crisis era. In February 2014, the Fed was still in the middle of its third round of asset purchases and interest rates were pegged near 0%. The unemployment rate was 6.7%

Less than a year before Yellen was sworn in, Bernanke had rattled markets with the mere hint of winding down the Fed’s $85 billion worth of monthly assets purchases. Bond markets took six months to recover from what was later called the “Taper Tantrum.”

Then, six months into Yellen’s tenure, oil prices cratered, which weighed on inflation, hurt corporate profits, and led to questions about the strength of the U.S. and global economic recovery. The road to policy normalization would be a winding one.

A ‘legend’ and a risk

In the spring of 2013 — with Yellen emerging as a clear favorite to be the next Fed chair — The Wall Street Journal captured something of a mixed mood among the economics establishment at the suggestion that Yellen would be tasked with leading out its Fed from its crisis-era stance.