Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan passes away at age 100
Odaily Planet Daily News: Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan has passed away at the age of 100. According to NBC News, citing his wife, Andrea Mitchell, the network's chief foreign affairs and chief Washington correspondent, he died at his home on Monday due to complications from Parkinson's disease.
Greenspan once steered the U.S. economy to record expansion, but his legacy dimmed with the financial crisis that erupted less than two years after he left office. Greenspan served as Fed Chairman for 18 years (from 1987 to his retirement in early 2006), a period marked by a booming stock market and low unemployment. He was more widely regarded than the four presidents he served under or the seven Treasury secretaries he worked with as a "maestro" of maintaining economic prosperity. Roger Ferguson, who served as Vice Chairman of the Fed from 1999 to 2006, stated: "Alan Greenspan should be remembered as one of the greatest central bankers in the world during the latter half of the 20th century, not just within the Fed." Ferguson noted that Greenspan "was among the first to recognize the impact of technology on U.S. productivity, enabling the economy to grow faster than expected without igniting inflation." (Jinshi)
