Roger Ferguson, the chief executive of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association and an earlier candidate for Treasury secretary in the Biden administration, said the U.S economy could be six percent bigger than it is today if policy makers narrowed the country's wealth gap.
(Editor's note: Late Monday, news reports circulated that Janet Yellen would likely get the post.)
The racial and economic divide "makes our economy smaller," he said Wednesday during a web event hosted by Youth INC, a non-profit based in New York. "Racism isn't an African-American problem, it's not a Black problem — it's everyone's problem."
Ferguson, who was vice chairman of the Federal Reserve's Board of Governors from 1999 to 2006, was among several candidates that President-elect Joe Biden's transition team is considering for Treasury secretary. Biden wants to make a historic choice for a job that has always been held by a White man.
(Related: Roger Ferguson Jr. to Retire as TIAA CEO)