Financial History Issue 132 (Winter 2020) | Page 22

When the President Calls An Interview with Paul A. Volcker By Simon W. Bowmaker The following conversation has been adapted from Simon Bowmaker’s inter- view with Paul Volcker and is published in honor of his passing on December 8, 2019. Mr. Volcker was an active member of the Museum of American Finance’s Advisory Former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker testifies before the Joint Economic Committee on May 14, 2008 on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC. The full committee met for a hearing on “Wall Street to Main Street: Is the Credit Crisis Over and What Can the Federal Government Do to Prevent Unnecessary Systemic Risk in the Future?” Council and the recipient of the Muse- um’s prestigious Whitehead Award for Distinguished Public Service and Finan- cial Leadership in 2009. The full version of Professor Bowmaker’s interview with Mr. Volcker is available in When the President Calls: Conversations with Economic Policy- makers (MIT Press, 2019). BACKGROUND INFORMATION Bowmaker: Why did you become an economist? Volcker: When I went to college at Princ- eton just after the war, I took economics and it intrigued me. For some unknown 20    FINANCIAL HISTORY  |  Winter 2020  | www.MoAF.org reason, my introduction to the subject was a course on comparative economic systems, which wasn’t the kind of Eco- nomics 101 version that you see today. Then I jumped into the most advanced economic theory class available, which was about business cycles. It was taught by Ozkar von Morgenstern, so I became fully developed in the Austrian school. I also took a money and banking course from Friedrich Lutz, which was attractive because it seemed to have more precision than other economics disciplines in those days—balance sheets had to balance, for example, although I now understand they don’t necessarily have to do so.