The Fed Really Couldn’t Comprehend Economics in 2006
Recently released transcripts from 2006 are "embarrassing," to say the least.
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Recently released transcripts from 2006 are "embarrassing," to say the least.
The GOP has embraced what used to be called, dismissively, "Fed bashing."
Friends with benefits get together for a chat.
"Our choice is not between good and bad, it's between terrible and worse."
“I've never seen the type of animosity between government and Wall Street. And I'm not sure where it comes from.”
It's a painting, not a photograph, unfortunately. Or maybe fortunately.
The former Fed chairman was only about 30 percent apologetic at today's Financial Crisis Committee hearings.
If the people who foresaw the housing crisis had been worth paying attention to, Greenspan would have paid attention to them.
On heels of new jobs announcement, he says there is little chance now of double-dip recession.
Threshold seen as a "tipping point" by analysts.
But it wasn’t like he didn’t know what was going on, okay?
Paintings of the former Fed chairman are being put out of sight.
And more celebrity tidbits, in today's gossip roundup.
Economists are probably just obsessed with it because manties are fun.
If Alan Greenspan's manty index is correct, then yes!
If it's anything like the lipstick or hemline indexes, probably not.
Why the former Federal Reserve chairman's late-career turnaround is like others before him, and why it's different.
Since being laid off, writer Moe Tkacik has had all the time in the world to wallow in coverage of the economic crisis. And there are a few things that are pissing her off.