They tried all that with me.......Jenny Cha trying to seduce me.......following me around......I don't jump at things...........I am not as weak as I look..........nor with money....neither with threats..................after being humiliated in so many ways............no amount of physical pain can compare with what happened..............as Janice Joplin.......the singer..........sang....."freedom is just another name for nothing left to lose"...........I am not as weak as I look......a baby face and I am not tall, dark or handsome.........................I don't give up..............ever........unless I know I am wrong............................my daughter is worth too much and so are the other kids of the world.........u will have to kill me............no amount of threats......brides, etc........will EVER work..
Kept by Clinton..............just another illuminati..........a wolf in sheeps clothing...............little red riding hood...........................strategy............distract..................confuse people...............with sexual infidelity and lies.........lied under oath.........Pres Clinton...........wrong of course..........it was just another weapon of mass distraction.........the 1994 world cup..............started in Chicago, Il........ended in LA................................during Clinton...........AND coincided exactly with OJ......being accused of a double homicide..............
Alan Greenspan
Alan Greenspan | |
---|---|
13th Chair of the Federal Reserve | |
In office August 11, 1987 – January 31, 2006 | |
President | Ronald Reagan George H. W. Bush Bill Clinton George W. Bush |
Deputy | Manley Johnson David Mullins Alice Rivlin Roger Ferguson |
Preceded by | Paul Volcker |
Succeeded by | Ben Bernanke |
10th Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers | |
In office September 4, 1974 – January 20, 1977 | |
President | Gerald Ford |
Preceded by | Herbert Stein |
Succeeded by | Charles Schultze |
Personal details | |
Born | New York City, New York, U.S. | March 6, 1926
Political party | Republican |
Spouse(s) | Joan Mitchell (1952–1953) Andrea Mitchell (1997–present) |
Education | Juilliard School New York University (BA, MA, PhD) Columbia University |
Greenspan came to the Federal Reserve Board from a consulting career. Although he was subdued in his public appearances, favorable media coverage raised his profile to a point that several observers likened him to a "rock star".[2][3][4] Democratic leaders of Congress criticized him for politicizing his office because of his support for Social Security privatization[5] and tax cuts, which they felt would increase the deficit.[6]
The easy-money policies of the Fed during Greenspan's tenure have been suggested by some to be a leading cause of the dotcom bubble and subprime mortgage crisis, which occurred within a year of his departure from the Fed, and have, said the Wall Street Journal, "tarnished his reputation."[7][8] Yale economist Robert Shiller argues that "once stocks fell, real estate became the primary outlet for the speculative frenzy that the stock market had unleashed".[9]
Contents
[hide]Early life and education[edit]
Greenspan was born in the Washington Heights area of New York City. His father, Herbert Greenspan, was of Romanian Jewish descent, and his mother, Rose Goldsmith, was of Hungarian Jewish descent.[10] His father worked as a stockbroker and market analyst in New York City.[11]Greenspan attended George Washington High School from 1940 until he graduated in June 1943, where one of his classmates was John Kemeny.[12] He played clarinet and saxophone along with Stan Getz. He further studied clarinet at the Juilliard School from 1943 to 1944.[13] Among his bandmates in the Woody Herman band was Leonard Garment, Richard Nixon's Special Counsel. In 1945, Greenspan attended New York University, where he earned a B.A. degree in economics summa cum laude in 1948[14] and an M.A. degree in economics in 1950.[15] At Columbia University, he pursued advanced economic studies under Arthur Burns but dropped out.[16]
In 1977, Greenspan obtained a Ph.D. in economics from New York University. His dissertation is not available from the university[17] since it was removed at Greenspan's request in 1987, when he became Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board. In April 2008, however, Barron's obtained a copy and notes that it includes "a discussion of soaring housing prices and their effect on consumer spending; it even anticipates a bursting housing bubble".[18]
Career[edit]
Before the Federal Reserve[edit]
During his economics studies at New York University, Greenspan worked under Eugene Banks, a managing director at the Wall Street investment bank Brown Brothers Harriman, in the firm's equity research department.[19] From 1948 to 1953, Greenspan worked as an analyst at The National Industrial Conference Board (currently known as The Conference Board), a business- and industry-oriented think tank in New York City.[20] From 1955 to 1987, when he was appointed chairman of the Federal Reserve, Greenspan was chairman and president of Townsend-Greenspan & Co., Inc., an economics consulting firm in New York City, a 32-year stint interrupted only from 1974 to 1977 by his service as Chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers under President Gerald Ford.[citation needed]In mid-1968, Greenspan agreed to serve Richard Nixon as his coordinator on domestic policy in the nomination campaign.[21] Greenspan has also served as a corporate director for Aluminum Company of America (Alcoa); Automatic Data Processing; Capital Cities/ABC, Inc.; General Foods; J.P. Morgan & Co.; Morgan Guaranty Trust Company; Mobil Corporation; and the Pittston Company.[22][23] He was a director of the Council on Foreign Relations foreign policy organization between 1982 and 1988.[24] He also served as a member of the influential Washington-based financial advisory body, the Group of Thirty in 1984.
Chairman of the Federal Reserve[edit]
What I've learned at the Federal Reserve is a new language which is called "Fed-speak". You soon learn to mumble with great incoherence. |
— Alan Greenspan[25] |
Two months after his confirmation Greenspan said immediately following the 1987 stock market crash that the Fed "affirmed today its readiness to serve as a source of liquidity to support the economic and financial system"[28][29][30] George H. W. Bush blamed Fed policy for not winning a second term. Democratic president Bill Clinton reappointed Greenspan, and consulted him on economic matters. Greenspan lent support to Clinton's 1993 deficit reduction program.[31] Greenspan was fundamentally monetarist in orientation on the economy, and his monetary policy decisions largely followed standard Taylor rule prescriptions (see Taylor 1993 and 1999). Greenspan also played a key role in organizing the U.S. bailout of Mexico during the 1994–95 Mexican peso crisis.[32]
In 2000, Greenspan raised interest rates several times; these actions were believed by many to have caused the bursting of the dot-com bubble. According to Nobel laureate Paul Krugman, however, "he didn't raise interest rates to curb the market's enthusiasm; he didn't even seek to impose margin requirements on stock market investors. Instead, he waited until the bubble burst, as it did in 2000, then tried to clean up the mess afterward".[33] E. Ray Canterbery agrees with Krugman's criticism.[34]
In January 2001, Greenspan, in support of President Bush's proposed tax decrease, stated that the federal surplus could accommodate a significant tax cut while paying down the national debt.[35]
In autumn 2001, as a decisive reaction to the September 11 attacks and various corporate scandals which undermined the economy, the Greenspan-led Federal Reserve initiated a series of interest cuts that brought down the Federal Funds rate to 1% in 2004. While presenting the Federal Reserve's Monetary Policy Report in July 2002, he said that "It is not that humans have become any more greedy than in generations past. It is that the avenues to express greed had grown so enormously". and suggested that financial markets need to be regulated.[36] His critics, led by Steve Forbes, attributed the rapid rise in commodity prices and gold to Greenspan's loose monetary policy, which Forbes believed had caused excessive asset inflation and a weak dollar. By late 2004, the price of gold was higher than its 12-year moving average.
Greenspan advised senior members of the George W. Bush administration to depose Saddam Hussein for the sake of the oil markets.[37] He believed that even a moderate disruption to the flow of oil could translate into high oil prices[38] which could lead to "chaos" in the global economy and bring the industrial world "to its knees".[39] He feared that Saddam could seize control of the Straits of Hormuz and restrict the transport of oil through them. In a 2007 interview, he said, "people do not realize in this country, for example, how tenuous our ties to international energy are. That is, we on a daily basis require continuous flow. If that flow is shut off, it causes catastrophic effects in the industrial world. And it’s that which made him [Saddam] far more important to get out than bin Laden."[40]
On May 18, 2004, Greenspan was nominated by President George W. Bush to serve for an unprecedented fifth term as chairman of the Federal Reserve. He was previously appointed to the post by Presidents Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and Clinton.
In a May 2005 speech, Greenspan stated: "Two years ago at this conference I argued that the growing array of derivatives and the related application of more-sophisticated methods for measuring and managing risks had been key factors underlying the remarkable resilience of the banking system, which had recently shrugged off severe shocks to the economy and the financial system. At the same time, I indicated some concerns about the risks associated with derivatives, including the risks posed by concentration in certain derivatives markets, notably the over-the-counter (OTC) markets for U.S. dollar interest rate options."[41]
Greenspan opposed tariffs against People's Republic of China for its refusal to let the yuan rise,[42] suggesting instead that any American workers displaced by Chinese trade could be compensated through unemployment insurance and retraining programs.[43]
Greenspan's term as a member of the Board ended on January 31, 2006, and Ben Bernanke was confirmed as his successor.
As chairman of the board, Greenspan did not give any broadcast interviews from 1987 through 2005.[44]
After the Federal Reserve[edit]
Immediately after leaving the Fed, Greenspan formed an economic consulting firm, Greenspan Associates LLC.[45] He also accepted an honorary (unpaid) position at HM Treasury in the United Kingdom.On February 26, 2007, Greenspan forecast a possible recession in the United States before or in early 2008.[46] Stabilizing corporate profits are said to have influenced his comments. The following day, the Dow Jones Industrial Average decreased by 416 points, losing 3.3% of its value.[47]
In May 2007, Greenspan was hired as a special consultant by Pacific Investment Management Company (PIMCO) to participate in their quarterly economic forums and speak privately with the bond managers about Fed interest rate policy.[48]
In August 2007, Deutsche Bank announced that it would be retaining Greenspan as a senior advisor to its investment banking team and clients.[49]
In mid-January 2008, hedge fund Paulson & Co. hired Greenspan as an adviser. According to the terms of their agreement he was not to advise any other hedge fund while working for Paulson. (In 2007 Paulson had foreseen the collapse of the sub-prime housing market and hired Goldman Sachs to package their sub-prime holdings into derivatives and sell them. Some economic commentators blamed this collapse on Greenspan's policies while at the Fed.)[50][51]
On April 30, 2009, Greenspan offered a defense of the H-1B visa program, telling a U.S. Senate subcommittee that the visa quota is "far too small to meet the need" and saying that it protects U.S. workers from global competition, creating a "privileged elite". Testifying on immigration reform before the Subcommittee on Immigration, Border Security and Citizenship, he said more skilled immigration was needed "as the economy copes with the forthcoming retirement wave of skilled baby boomers".[52]
Memoir[edit]
Greenspan wrote a memoir titled The Age of Turbulence: Adventures in a New World, published September 17, 2007.[53][54] Greenspan says that he wrote this book in longhand mostly while soaking in the bathtub, a habit he regularly employs ever since an accident in 1971, when he injured his back.[55] Greenspan wrote:To this day, the bathtub is where I get many of my best ideas. My assistants have gotten used to typing from drafts scrawled on damp yellow pads—a chore that got much easier once we found a kind of pen whose ink doesn't run. Immersed in my bath, I'm as happy as Archimedes as I contemplate the world.[56]Greenspan discusses in his book, among other things, his history in government and economics, capitalism and other economic systems, current issues in the global economy, and future issues that face the global economy. In the book Greenspan criticizes President George W. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, and the Republican-controlled Congress for abandoning the Republican Party's principles on spending and deficits. Greenspan's criticisms of President Bush include his refusal to veto spending bills, sending the country into increasingly deep deficits, and for "putting political imperatives ahead of sound economic policies".[57] Greenspan writes, "They swapped principle for power. They ended up with neither. They deserved to lose [the 2006 election]".[55][58] He praised Bill Clinton above all the other presidents for whom he'd worked for his "consistent, disciplined focus on long-term economic growth".[59] Although he respected what he saw as Richard Nixon's immense intelligence, Greenspan found him to be "sadly paranoid, misanthropic and cynical". He said of Gerald Ford that he "was as close to normal as you get in a president, but he was never elected".[58] Regarding future U.S. economic policy, Greenspan recommends improving the U.S. primary and secondary education systems. He asserts this would narrow the inequality between the minority of high-income earners and most workers whose wages have not grown in proportion with globalization and the nation's GDP growth.[60]
No comments:
Post a Comment