El equipo economico de Obama (que debe ser el peor en la historia del pais) pierde a otro miembro. Esta ves Christina Romer se va.
Esta es la economista que prometio que el estimulo economico mantendria el desempleo debajo del 8%.
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Romer to Resign as Obama Adviser .
By DAVID WESSEL
WASHINGTON—Christina Romer said she would resign as chairman of President Barack Obama's Council of Economic Advisers to return to her teaching post at the University of California at Berkeley, effective Sept. 3.
Ms. Romer is the second member of Mr. Obama's economic team to leave. White House budget director Peter Orszag left earlier this summer. She said she is returning to California so the youngest of her three children can begin high school there.
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Christina Romer
.Ms. Romer, 51 years old, was a high-profile salesperson for the Obama economic program—and considered successful at that mission, in part because of her sincerity and plain-spoken style.
The post, she said in an interview Thursday, "was definitely as hard as I thought it ever would have been."
"I never anticipated the amount of the contact I'd have with the president," she added. "If anyone had told me that I'd meet the president of the free world every day, I never would have believed it."
Among her challenges was explaining why her prediction that the Obama-backed fiscal stimulus would keep the unemployment rate below 8% proved overly optimistic. The unemployment rate is now at 9.5%.
"I certainly hoped it would be lower," she said. "The world deteriorated between November 2008 when I started" and the initial estimates were made "and when we took office January 21. Do I wake up every morning and wish it were 8% instead of 9.5%? You bet."
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Ms. Romer listened to President Obama speak about the economy at the White House in May.
.In internal White House circles, Ms. Romer occasionally clashed with Lawrence Summers, the Obama adviser and former Harvard University president and Treasury secretary. But on Thursday, she said, "If anyone had told me that I'd come to view Larry Summers as one of my dearest friends, I never would have believed it. But I do."
Ms. Romer has been mentioned as a possible successor to Janet Yellen as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. Ms. Yellen has been nominated to be vice chairman of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington.
Ms. Romer will join the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board, which is chaired by former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker. Among the candidates to succeed her at the Council of Economic Advisers is Austan Goolsbee, who is on leave from the University of Chicago's Booth School of Business.
Ms. Romer's academic work focused, among other things, on the causes of and recovery from the Great Depression and the impact of monetary, spending and tax policy on the economy. Her 19 months in Washington has confirmed some of her prior beliefs and altered others. "The first thing we have learned that policy does matter dramatically," she said.
"Where we are today is certainly not good. But in the absence of the actions taken by the Fed, the actions taken by the regulators and the Recovery Act [the official name of the stimulus bill], the economy would have been even more terrible."
One thing she says she hadn't realized previously: "The degree to which you often only get one shot at something like the Recovery Act."
"An economist's natural instinct is to do things in stages. You take one action, see what it does and see if you need more," she explained. But with the Bush administration Troubled Asset Relief Program to shore up the banks or the Obama fiscal stimulus, that proved wrong. "I didn't realize the degree to which you have only one shot."
Ms. Romer said she also was surprised that there was so much controversy and hesitation in Congress over renewing the extension of unemployment benefits to 99 weeks with such a high jobless rate. "I wouldn't have believed that 9.5% unemployment wouldn't count as an emergency and thought that [proposal] would have been a slam dunk.
Ms. Romer's husband and frequent collaborator, David Romer, also on leave from Berkeley, worked at the International Monetary Fund while she was at the White House.
Write to David Wessel at
capital@wsj.com