• For starters, there's Alan Greenspan's absurdly tight fist.

    FORBES: Digital Rules

  • If policymakers learn that lesson from Greenspan's era and its aftermath, then, perversely, Alan Greenspan's legacy will be a positive one.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • We are already suffering from a mild inflation, thanks to Alan Greenspan's over-printing of the greenback.

    FORBES: Fact and Comment

  • The White House is incapable of leadership, so the ball is now in Alan Greenspan's court.

    FORBES: Fact and Comment

  • So did the stock market--up 5% since President Bush raised Ben Bernanke to Alan Greenspan's throne at the Fed.

    FORBES: Magazine Article

  • The inflation set off by Alan Greenspan's mistaken monetary extravagance in 2004 has not been fixed by his successor.

    FORBES: Soviet Unionism

  • Alan Greenspan's testimony this week to both houses of Congress may have briefly halted the slide in equity prices.

    ECONOMIST: Overview

  • One Mexican bookseller is doing a brisk trade with piles of Doris Lessing novels, books on Yoga and even Alan Greenspan's autobiography.

    BBC: Havana book fair feeds Cuba's hunger for literature

  • If it were then a question of assigning blame rather than credit, Mr Clinton would no doubt want to increase Alan Greenspan's ample share.

    ECONOMIST: Politics and the boom | The

  • Alan Greenspan's not-so-secret model pegs 8000 as the Dow's fair-market value.

    FORBES: Woody and the Dow

  • Now, attention will turn to Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan's keenly awaited testimony on monetary policy to the Senate Banking Committee on Thursday at 1400 GMT.

    BBC: US inflation jumps

  • With its March 25th move, combined with Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan's icy proclamations about excess in the financial markets, the Fed appears for now to have sided with the hawks.

    ECONOMIST: The storm before the storm?

  • This is apparently Alan Greenspan's view, by the way.

    ECONOMIST: Performing miracles | The

  • Bush's political skills will be severely tested from the get-go particularly given the choppy economic waters ahead, thanks to Alan Greenspan's tight money and the failure of Washington to enact meaningful tax cuts.

    FORBES: Election Stranger Than Fiction

  • The paper backs US Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan's view that the policies of the European Union member states are to blame "for not using the new technologies to reduce costs and ditch protectionist ballast".

    BBC: European press review

  • Commenting on Mr. Alan Greenspan's crafting of U.S. monetary policy, a recent magazine article warned against the obsessive drive to achieve some arbitrary consumer price index rate, and compared it to Captain Ahab's fatal pursuit of Moby Dick.

    CNN: QUIPPED ONE ANONYMOUS

  • But Alan Greenspan's aim has likewise been to do no harm: he has passively accommodated the expansion, by and large, rather than trying either to spur it or curb it, and the administration has always backed him up.

    ECONOMIST: Politics and the boom

  • And Alan Greenspan's decision this week to raise interest rates by just a quarter of a point, never mind that it was the first increase for two and a half years, will do little to disturb their equanimity: the change had been widely expected and when it came the markets applauded politely (see article).

    ECONOMIST: All sewn up?

  • It's most likely the last one for Alan Greenspan, who's been chairman of the Federal Reserve Board for 18 years now.

    NPR: The Marketplace Report: Greenspan's Successor

  • On that basis, people might think that the main responsibility of Alan Greenspan, today's Fed chairman, is growth.

    ECONOMIST: Dial M for money

  • It is hard, of course, to feel too sorry for the Fed's Alan Greenspan, who enjoyed rock-star-like levels of popularity in the late 1990s, when America happily handed him the credit for its long economic boom.

    ECONOMIST: Reluctant party-poopers | The

  • The Federal Reserve's Alan Greenspan has declared himself fully vindicated in his decision not to prick the stockmarket bubble in the late 1990s, but instead to wait for it to burst and then cut rates sharply to cushion the economic consequences.

    ECONOMIST: Yesterday's financial architecture needs refurbishing

  • This is why Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman, has advised caution on a fiscal stimulus.

    ECONOMIST: Interest rates

  • But spare a thought for Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman, who actually has to take the decisions.

    ECONOMIST: Alan’s key | The

  • Monetary-policy announcements from Beijing are still not as important as the Delphic words of Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman.

    ECONOMIST: China's economy

  • But most were too taken with the alluring yields on offer an addiction Alan Greenspan, the Fed's former chairman, has likened to cocaine abuse.

    ECONOMIST: Securitisation

  • Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman, and a man with a somewhat Panglossian view of the world, thinks that all these fears are overdone.

    ECONOMIST: Buttonwood

  • In a speech last year, Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman, argued that asset prices have an important role to play in setting monetary policy.

    ECONOMIST: Should central banks try to target asset-price inflation?

  • Alan Greenspan, the Fed's chairman, gave a warning this week that interest rates would have to be raised faster than expected if inflationary pressures intensified.

    ECONOMIST: Buttonwood: Curve balls | The

  • Last year global liquidity took a dive after Alan Greenspan, the U.S. Federal Reserve chairman, cranked up interest rates to beat back the stirrings of inflation in America and defend the falling dollar.

    CNN: BUSINESS FORECAST '96

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