Clinton's Team: Top Economic Posts Go to People Likely To Get Plans Enacted --- President-Elect Also Wants To Reassure the Markets; Basic Program Is Intact --- Some Outcries From the Left

In supporting roles, Mr. Clinton is expected today to announce three other appointments. Laura Tyson, 45, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley, is his likely choice to head the Council of Economic Advisers; Alice Rivlin, 61, the first director of the Congressional Budget Office,...

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Published inThe Wall Street journal. Eastern edition
Main Author By David Wessel and Jeffrey H. Birnbaum
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, N.Y Dow Jones & Company Inc 10.12.1992
EditionEastern edition
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Summary:In supporting roles, Mr. Clinton is expected today to announce three other appointments. Laura Tyson, 45, an economist at the University of California at Berkeley, is his likely choice to head the Council of Economic Advisers; Alice Rivlin, 61, the first director of the Congressional Budget Office, is to be Mr. Panetta's deputy at the budget office; and Roger Altman, 46, a Clinton college friend and a Treasury veteran now at Blackstone Group, an investment bank, is to be Mr. Bentsen's deputy. The importance of the three-member Council of Economic Advisers varies from one administration to the next, and it's too soon to know how big a role Ms. Tyson would play in this one. But she isn't as prominent an economist as some previous chairmen and isn't likely to stand on the same rung as Mr. Bentsen, Mr. Rubin or Mr. Panetta. What's more, the council's stature will probably be lessened if Mr. Rubin creates a separate economics staff in his new White House post. What is most striking is that Mr. Clinton, the apostle of "change," not only gave congressional Democrats what amounted to a veto over his economic appointees but chose veteran members of Congress for both the Treasury and the budget office. David Hale, chief economist at Kemper Financial Cos., calls it "a de facto parliamentary government." The unanswered question is which end of Pennsylvania Avenue will get the upper hand. Will Mr. Clinton succeed in pressing his agenda through Congress? Or will congressional leaders use the president's strong desire for harmony to get him to accept their agenda?
ISSN:0099-9660