"Bernanke certainly knows the importance of well-functioning markets. In <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i> he wrote persuasively that runs on the banks and extensive defaults on loans reduced the efficiency of the financial sector, prevented it from doing its normal job in allocating resources, and contributed to the Depression severity. The Depression-era problems he studied are mirrored by similar issues today, and they need urgent attention."<b>---Robert J. Shiller, <i>New York Times</i></b>
"Bernanke probably knows more about the Depression of the 1930s, about specific events and economic interpretations, than any other living person."<b>---Michael Barone, <i>U.S. News & World Report</i></b>
"Tempting as it is to focus on President Herbert Hoover and the 1929 U.S. market crash, Bernanke explores conditions across dozens of countries—assessing where banking crises erupted, how deeply economic activity plummeted and which central banks made the right calls."<b>---Carlos Lozada, <i>Washington Post</i></b>
"Having devoted much of his career to studying the causes of the Great Depression, Bernanke was the academic expert on how to prevent financial crises from spinning out of control and threatening the general economy. One line from his <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i> sounds especially prescient today: 'To the extent that bank panics interfere with normal flows of credit, they may affect the performance of the real economy.'"<b>---Roger Lowenstein, <i>New York Times Magazine</i></b>
"Fortunately, before he became entangled in these restrictions [Bernanke] did edit and help write a book, <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i>. . . . Bernanke's motive was that understanding the depression would provide important clues to what can go wrong with capitalist market systems."<b>---Samuel Brittan, <i>Financial Times</i></b>
"The financial crisis has made Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke's book <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i> a hot seller. . . . Bernanke, a former Princeton University economist, is considered the pre-eminent living scholar of the Great Depression. He is practicing today what he preached in his book: Flood the system with money to avoid a depression."<b>---Dennis Cauchon, <i>USA Today</i></b>
"When Ben Bernanke arrived at the Federal Reserve in February 2006 as the new chairman of the central bank, he had a copy of his 2001 book, <i>Inflation Targeting: Lessons from the International Experience</i>, tucked under his arm. Not literally, of course. He was hoping to convince his colleagues on the Federal Open Market Committee of the value of an explicit inflation target. Little did he know that less than two years later he'd be shelving <i>Inflation Targeting</i> and turning to <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i>, another of his books, for guidance. In his book of essays, Bernanke calls the Great Depression the 'Holy Grail of macroeconomics.' He writes that 'the experience of the 1930s continues to influence macroeconomists' beliefs, policy recommendations, and research agendas.'"<b>---Caroline Baum, <i>Bloomberg.com</i></b>
"With some observers saying that the ongoing financial crisis could be the worst since the Great Depression, the greatest living expert on that period is getting the chance to apply its economic lessons. . . . In <i>Essays on the Great Depression</i> . . . [Bernanke] notes that understanding that period is the 'holy grail of macroeconomics.'"<b>---Spencer Jakab, <i>Dow Jones Newswires</i></b>
"Bernanke is the master of applied microeconomics. Not only is he technically proficient but his ability to place his results in a larger macroeconomic context is unparalleled."<b>---Mark Toma, <i>Financial History Review</i></b>