I am embarrassed for Paul Krugman that he wrote this:
January 7, 2013, 8:46 am
The Outside Man.
Yes, I’ve heard about the notion that I should be nominated
as Treasury Secretary. I’m flattered,
but it really is a bad idea.
Part of the reason is that I am indeed the World’s Worst
Administrator — and that does matter. Someone else can do the paperwork — but
an administrative job requires making hiring and firing decisions, it means
keeping track of many things, and that, to say the least, is not my forte.
Oh, and there’s not a chance that I would be confirmed.
But the main point, as I see it, is that it would mean
taking me out of a quasi-official job that I believe I’m good at and putting me
into one I’d be bad at.
So first of all, let’s talk frankly about the job I have.
The New York Times isn’t just some newspaper somewhere, it’s the nation’s paper
of record. As a result, being an op-ed columnist at the Times is a pretty big
deal — one I’m immensely grateful to have been granted — and those who hold the
position, if they know how to use it effectively, have a lot more influence on
national debate than, say, most senators. Does anyone doubt that the White
House pays attention to what I write?
Now, officials inside the administration can of course have
even more influence — but only if they’re good at a very different kind of
game, that of persuading the president and his inner circle in
behind-closed-doors discussion. And everything I know about myself says that
I’m not very good at that game.
By my reckoning, then, an administration job, no matter how
senior, would actually reduce my influence, leaving me unable to say publicly
what I really think and all too probably finding myself unable to make headway
in internal debates.
So again, I’m flattered — but I think I should stay in my
current position as Mr. Outside, an annoying if sympathetic voice they can’t
ignore.
Today the president nominated Chief of Staff Jacob Lew.