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Geithner brings crisis experience and opposition to Treasury

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By The Associated Press

Saturday, Nov 22, 2008 - 02:16:41 pm CST

NEW YORK — President-elect Barack Obama and his likely choice for Treasury secretary, Timothy Geithner, should have a lot to talk about.

Like Obama, Geithner spent time abroad as a child and he hates to miss a pickup basketball game.

The 47-year-old president of the New York Federal Reserve has been working closely with Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on the credit crisis. Wall Street cheered the news of his selection. The Dow Jones industrial average jumped nearly 500 points Friday, rising sharply after reports that Geithner would be nominated.

Story Photo
In this May 4, 2007 file photo Timothy Geithner is seen in Montreal. President-elect Barack Obama is likely to name Timothy Geithner, president of the New York Federal Reserve, as Treasury Secretary in a time of intense economic turmoil as he rounds out the upper echelon of his Cabinet, a senior Democratic official familiar with the deliberations said Friday, Nov. 21, 2008. (AP Photo/The Canadian Press, Ian Barrett, File)

As president of the New York Fed, Geithner has been on the front lines of the central bank’s efforts to battle the financial crisis and to get credit flowing more freely. He has a close working relationship with Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke.

When Geithner worked at the Treasury Department during the Clinton administration, he dealt with international financial crises and played a big role in negotiating financial aid for South Korea and Brazil.

Those who know Geithner say he is motivated by challenges — and that the financial crisis gripping global markets today is no exception.

Justin Rudelson, a friend of Geithner’s from Dartmouth College who teaches there, said he asked Geithner in June whether he was getting enough sleep.

“He said, ’Justin, you have to realize, we live for this. We live for these kinds of crises.“’

Geithner (pronounced: GITE-ner) worked at Treasury for 13 years ending in 2001, and played a key role in shaping U.S. response to the Asian currency crisis of 1997 to 1998.

In Geithner’s last job at Treasury, he was under secretary for international affairs under Secretaries Robert Rubin and Lawrence Summers, who was also considered a top candidate for Treasury secretary in an Obama administration.

“He was a smart guy, an impressive guy to deal with,” said Oliver I. Ireland, former associate general counsel of the Fed’s Board of Governors, who attended meetings with Geithner. “He was one of their stronger people.”

While Rudelson and other friends say Geithner’s temperament is similar to Obama’s — calm — critics say he’s thin-skinned and tends to take disagreements as a personal challenge.

“I would expect his confirmation hearings to be animated, with some strong opposition asking questions about his involvement in the AIG, Lehman, Goldman, Morgan and Bear decisions by the New York Fed,” said Joshua Rosner, managing director at research firm Graham Fisher & Co. in New York.

Some say he is not ready for the top job at Treasury.

“If Tim Geithner, the New York Fed chairman, gets a top spot in the Barack Obama’s cabinet, we are done, finished, kaput. It is that simple,” CNBC commentator Jim Cramer wrote in Real Money magazine. Cramer blamed him for the decision to let Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. file for bankruptcy in September.

Geithner spent most of his childhood abroad, living in India, Thailand and Zimbabwe. His father, Peter Geithner, is an Asia expert who worked at the Ford Foundation for 28 years.

“Tim was always very adaptable to the changing locations in which we lived,” his father told Dartmouth’s student newspaper in a recent interview. “I think (moving) allowed Tim and his siblings to get used to getting on planes, used to being in different situations.”

An amateur photographer, Tim Geithner turned the family’s Bangkok bathroom into a darkroom, his mother told the paper. Geithner’s parents did not return calls for this article.

Geithner studied Chinese at Dartmouth, spending at least one summer in China.

After graduating in 1983, he got a master’s in international economics and East Asian Studies from Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, graduating in 1985.

Before joining Treasury, he worked for Kissinger Associates Inc., the consulting firm founded by former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

After leaving Treasury in 2001, he worked for the International Monetary Fund, where he was director of policy development. He’s been president of the New York Fed since 2003.

Geithner met his wife, Carole Sonnenfeld Geithner, in his senior year at Dartmouth. The couple has two children.

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AP Economics Writer Jeannine Aversa in Washington contributed to this report.

 


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