Former Fed Chair Alan Greenspan Dies at 100
- Alan Greenspan served as chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1987 to 2006 and guided the U.S. economy through a prolonged period of growth known as the Great Moderation,.
- He died at age 100 from complications related to Parkinson's disease, as confirmed by his wife, Andrea Mitchell.
- Greenspan was known for his guarded communication style and was praised for managing financial crises, though he later faced criticism for policies linked to financial deregulation that contributed to the 2007-2009 financial crisis,.
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524 Articles
Alan Greenspan, Who Led Federal Reserve for Nearly 2 Decades, Dies at 100
Alan Greenspan, the longtime chairman of the Federal Reserve who […] The post Alan Greenspan, Who Led Federal Reserve for Nearly 2 Decades, Dies at 100 appeared first on The Media Line.
Alan Greenspan, Fed chairman who served with four presidents and faced several recessions has died at 100
One of the most influential economic policymakers in the last four decades and chairman of the Federal Reserve for almost twenty years, under four different United States presidents from different parties, Alan Greenspan died this week at the age of 100.
He convinced Clinton to help the falling former Urss and managed to handle the dot-com bubble, but he underestimated the subprimes.
Economist Alan Greenspan dead at 100
WASHINGTON -- Alan Greenspan, the jazz-playing U.S. Federal Reserve chair who was celebrated for engineering a decade of prosperity but later shared the blame for a devastating financial crisis, died Monday. He was 100.
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