Former Bank of Israel governor Stanley Fischer on Wednesday
is reportedly the top choice to become vice chairman of the US Federal Reserve
Bank, it was reported Wednesday.
According to the Wall Street Journal and Israel’s Channel 2
news, the White House was close to nominating Fischer, who resigned from the
Bank of Israel earlier this year, to be Janet Yellen’s second in command at the
US’s central bank.
Fischer served as Bank of Israel governor from 2005 to 2013,
and was credited with successfully steering the country through the global
financial downturn.
In January, Fischer submitted his resignation to Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. He told Netanyahu he wanted to step down in April,
but the prime minister convinced him to delay the resignation until June. His
term was originally set to end in 2015.
His name was touted as a possible choice to take over the
Fed chairmanship from Ben Bernanke earlier in the year, but Yellen got the nod.
Fischer, 69, was born in Northern Rhodesia (now Zambia) and
lived in Southern Rhodesia (modern Zimbabwe) before his family moved to the
United States. He served as the chief economist at the World Bank in the late
1980s and as first deputy managing director of the International Monetary Fund
from 1994 to 2001.
He moved to Israel in 2005 to take over Israel’s Central
Bank and left the country for the US after resigning in June. He was succeeded
by Karnit Flug.
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