Jump To:  
Search For:


Meet Neel Kashkari: The Man With The $700 Billion Wallet | BrokenControllers.com
Log InUsernamePassword
Remember Me:            
Register
Register




    

   TV Shows: 24 returns to the television screen on January
11th, 2009. Keep up-to-date with Jack Bauer and his gun-battles
by watching season seven's episodes online for free.


Broken Controllers Message Boards » » Tagging Database

 Meet Neel Kashkari: The Man With The $700 Billion Wallet

Post New Topic   
Average Rating: 0.00 (0 Ratings)    Choose A Rating:  
 Replies: 0 | Views: 2263 
 
Author Message
whadu
Level 47: Snake Eater


Level 47: Snake Eater

Posts: 31642

Timestamp: Mon Oct 06, 08 11:15 AM


Post URL: Meet Neel Kashkari: The Man With The $700 Billion Wallet Reply With Quote

wsj: A Goldman Sachs Group alumnus in charge of the nation’s economic rescue? How unusual.

Except, of course, it isn’t. As The Wall Street Journal’s Deborah Solomon reported today, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson is promoting Neel Kashkari, the Treasury’s assistant secretary for international affairs, to be the point man overseeing the $700 billion financial bailout as the interim head of Paulson’s Office of Financial Stability. The full appointment would need Senate confirmation, which is unlikely to come given the short remaining tenure in this Administration.




The move essentially puts a new title on what Kashkari he has been doing since he joined Treasury in 2006–examining the consequences of an economic housing fallout. Kashkari was one of three Treasury staffers–including general counsel Robert Hoyt and head of legislative affairs Kevin Fromer–who stayed up until 4 a.m. last Sunday putting together the $700 billion bailout bill that was shot down by House Republicans the next day.

Kashkari (above left) is an Indian-American who has a few things in common with Paulson (above right). Both are former Goldman Sachs bankers, though Kashkari, at 35 years old, is much younger and was just a vice president-level banker in Goldman’s San Francisco technology banking effort when Paulson tapped him to join Treasury. Both also are Midwesterners. Kashkari grew up in Stow, Ohio, and earned a bachelor’s and master’s degree in engineering from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Paulson was raised in Barrington Hills, Ill. And both sport similar hairstyles– or lack thereof.

Kashkari didn’t take a conventional route into banking. He started out as an aerospace engineer at TRW, developing technology for NASA projects like the James Webb Space Telescope, the replacement to Hubble, which is scheduled to launch in 2013.

He earned an M.B.A. at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School of Business. While there, one of his professors was Michael Useem, who liked to put students through grueling, Outward Bound-type strengths of endurance and strategy. Kashkari participated in one Army simulation in 2002 at Fort Dix, where he was quoted in this 2002 Philadelphia Inquirer article in a comment just as applicable to today’s financial crisis as the project he was working on: “We were all taught to play nice,” Kashkari said. “So who’s going to fight in the sandbox?”

After Wharton, Kashkari joined Goldman and worked in San Francisco, where he advised companies that create computer security programs like antivirus software. He and his wife, Minal, still keep a house in California.

Paulson likes to surround himself with people he’s comfortable with: people, mostly, from Goldman Sachs. Paulson’s inner circle already includes former Goldmanites Dan Jester, a financial institutions banker, and retired banker Steve Shafran, who focused on corporate restructuring at Goldman. It also included Robert Steel, who has since left Treasury to become CEO of Wachovia.

Kashkari’s appointment is another example of how deep those Goldman Sachs ties go. In fact, Paulson himself was recruited by a former Goldman Sachs banker: former White House Chief of Staff Josh Bolten. Bolten overcame Paulson’s reluctance to persuade him to take the job as Treasury Secretary at a time when Paulson was so wary of the job that he declined to meet with President Bush because he knew he couldn’t say no to the President himself. According to an article in The International Economy by Fred Barnes in 2006, Paulson also believed that the Bush administration would not be able to accomplish many financial changes in 2007 and 2008. Kashkari’s new job show just how wrong Paulson was back then.

Source: wsj

___
View User's Profile Weblog Send Private Message Send E-Mail Visit User's Homepage AIM Address
 Replies: 0 | Views: 2263 
 
Post New Topic   Reply To Topic
Broken Controllers Message Boards » » Tagging Database 
Page 1 Of 1


More Topics
    Topics   Author 
Gates Estimates 2009 War Costs at $136 Billion - AP RSS Feed
Who would you rather meet in person, B. Obama or Andy Griff RSS Feed
The Porn Industry Wants a $5 Billion Bailout RSS Feed
N.J. FACES $130 BILLION PENSION AND PHARMA PLAN DEFICIT: AN RSS Feed
Time Warner sees $25 billion Q4 charge, cuts outlook - Reut RSS Feed
Porn Industry Seeks 5 Billion Dollar Bailout RSS Feed
The following stats were released today: $136 billion for t RSS Feed
Gates says Afghan surge may cost $5.5 billion in fiscal 09 RSS Feed
Guys if you were able to meet yourself when you were 12 yea RSS Feed
A One Star Story no more: Meet Storyline RSS Feed
 

Jump To:  


Home    Clubs    Engine    Design    Contact    RSS


Legal Disclaimer

Jump To:  
Search For: