Is the U.S. Fed chief still considered as being ‘God on a good day’?

The job of being chair of the U.S. Federal Reserve was once described as being “God on a good day.”
That was before the 2008 financial crisis and the Great Recession, but still, the Fed chair is the director of the world’s largest economy. Stocks, bonds and exchange rates surge and fall based solely on the words that come out of the Fed chair’s mouth.
Talk about a power trip.
But the four people alive today who have actually held the position don’t think it’s anything like being a deity.
“You can’t exactly do what you want,” former Fed chair Paul Volcker said Thursday at an event at International House in New York. “You have a board. You have a public. You’ve got [regional] reserve bank presidents.”
CNN’s Fareed Zakaria moderated the discussion with former Fed chairs Volcker, Ben Bernanke, Alan Greenspan and current chair Janet Yellen. It was the first time all four living Fed chairs were interviewed at the same time.
Major decisions on interest rates and other measures to boost or slow down the economy are all made by a committee. The chair only gets one vote.
Volcker, who served as Fed chair from 1979 until 1987, is famous for tackling inflation. His committee did it by hiking interest rates to an all-time high of 20%. That raised American’s mortgage rates, credit card rates and other borrowing costs and made Volcker a very unpopular man for a while.
Instead of an ego boost, he often felt more like people “gave us some rope to hang ourselves.”
He suspects the carpet in the Fed chair’s office still shows the wear from where he paced back and forth.
Ben Bernanke was chair from 2006 to 2014 — right in the middle of the financial crisis and major recession. He called the Fed a “wonderful institution,” not a one-man show.
“I didn’t take the job for adulation,” he told Zakaria. “We had tremendous responsibilities to try to address these terrible risks.”