Ben Bernanke’s new book, “The Courage to Act: A Memoir of a Crisis
and its Aftermath,” was released on October 5. When the title of the book
was revealed in
April, it apparently hit a few nerves. Market
Watch reported that “Not everyone has been enamored with either Bernanke or
his book-titling skills,” listing representative negative reactions to the
title from Twitter.
On October 7, Stephen Colbert began an interview
of Bernanke by asking about his choice of title for the book, to which Bernanke
responded,
“I totally blame my wife, it was entirely her idea.”
I hope to comment more substantively on the book after I get
a chance to read it, but for now, I just wanted to point out a fun fact about
the title. The phrase “courage to act” is the third of three parts of the U.S. Air Force
Fire Protection motto: “the desire to serve, the ability to perform, and
the courage to act.”
Bernanke has made an explicit analogy between monetary
policymakers in the crisis and fire fighters before. In a speech
at Princeton in April 2014, he said, “In the middle of a big fire, you don’t
start worrying about the fire laws. You try to get the fire out.” On his blog,
Bernanke described a bill proposed by Senators Elizabeth Warren and David
Vitter as “roughly equivalent to shutting down the fire department to encourage
fire safety.” The appeal of the fire fighter analogy to technocratic
policymakers with academic backgrounds must be huge. How many nerds’ dreams can
be summed up by the notion of saving
people from fire…with your brain!
Do we want our policymakers “playing fire fighter”? Ideally,
we would be better off if they were more like Smoky the Bear, preventing rather
than responding to emergencies. Anat
Admati, among others, makes this point in her piece “Where’s the Courage to
Act on Banks?” in which she argues that “banks need much more capital,
specifically in the form of equity. In this area, the reforms engendered by the
crisis have fallen far short.”
Air Force Fire Protection selected its motto by
popular vote in 1980. The nominator of the motto was Sargent William J.
Sawyers. A discussion of the new motto in the 1980 Fire Protection Newsletter
reveals additional dimensions of the analogy, as well as its limits:
The motto signifies that the first prerequisite of a fire fighter is "the desire to serve." The fire fighter must understand that he is "serving" the public and there is no compensation which is adequate to reward the fire fighter for what they may ultimately give - their life. The second part of the motto is absolutely necessary if the fire fighter is to do the job and do it safely. "The ability to perform" signifies not only a physical and mental ability but also that knowledge is possessed which enables the fire fighter to accomplish the task. The final segment of the motto indicates that fire fighters must have an underlying "courage to act" even when they know what's at stake. To enter a smoke filled building not knowing what's in it or where the fire is, or whether the building is about to collapse requires "courage." To fight an aircraft fire involving munitions, pressure cylinders, volatile fuels, fuel tanks, and just about anything else imaginable requires "courage."
The tripartite Air Force Fire Protection motto emphasizes
intrinsic motivation for public service and personal competence as
prerequisites to courage. Indeed, in the Roman Catholic tradition, courage, or
fortitude, is a cardinal virtue. But as St. Thomas Aquinas
explains, fortitude ranks third among the cardinal virtues, behind prudence and justice. He
writes that “prudence, since it is a perfection of reason, has the good
essentially: while justice effects this good, since it belongs to justice to
establish the order of reason in all human affairs: whereas the other virtues
safeguard this good, inasmuch as they moderate the passions, lest they lead man
away from reason's good. As to the order of the latter, fortitude holds the
first place, because fear of dangers of death has the greatest power to make
man recede from the good of reason.”
Courage alone, without prudence and justice, is akin to
running into a burning building, literally or metaphorically. It may either be
commendable or the height of recklessness. As we evaluate Bernanke’s legacy at
the Fed, and the role of the Fed more generally, any appraisal of courage
should be preceded by consideration of the prudence and justice of Fed actions.
Other mottos that were nominated for the Air Force Fire
Protection motto are also interesting to consider in light of the
Fed-as-fire-fighter analogy. Which others could Bernanke have considered as
book titles? The proposed mottos include:
- Let us know to let you know we care.
- Wherever flames may rage, we are there.
- Duty bound.
- To serve and preserve.
- To intercede in time of need.
- When no one else can do.
- Duty bound when the chips are down.
- For those special times.
- Forever vigilant
- Honor through compassion and bravery.
- To care to be there.
- Prepared for the challenge.
- Readiness is our profession.
- To protect - to serve
- Without fear and without reproach.
- Fire prevention - our job is everyone's business
- Support your fire fighters, we can't do the job alone.
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