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The central bank kept interest rates steady for a fifth straight meeting, despite badgering from President Trump. It has ...
Every Fed Chair gets remembered for something. Paul Volcker tamed inflation in the 1980s. Alan Greenspan presided over the dot-com boom and bust in the 1990s through the early 2000s. Ben Bernanke ...
The FOMC keeps rates steady, but with two dissenting votes. Odds of a rate cut in September fall below 50%. Stocks sell off ...
Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan told a House panel that his belief that banks would be more prudent in their lending practices because of the need to protect their stockholders ...
Alan Greenspan acknowledged today he made "an awful lot of mistakes" during his career, citing that he was right about 70 percent of the time but wrong 30 percent of the time. Trying to look back ...
With Alan Greenspan being 92-years-old, he was an easy target for a death hoax and it was not the first time. Last year, he was a victim of another death hoax, which was quickly debunked.
Of Greenspan's calm, former Treasury secretary James Baker told Martin: "I just don't think Alan gets nervous." His political skills flow from a simple insight: people in public life have big egos ...
Alan Greenspan should be apologizing to the country. Instead, he's back without regrets—and the star-struck media lets him get away with it.
Alan Murray is chief content officer for Time Inc. I got to know Alan Greenspan in the mid-1980s, when I was cub reporter at the Wall Street Journal covering economic statistics.
Alan Greenspan, the former chairman of the Federal Reserve, goes to a lot of parties. He and his wife, the TV journalist Andrea Mitchell, "sort of get invited everywhere," he says, sitting in ...
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