From the archives: Alan Greenspan on systematic fear in the economy
AI Summary
Alan Greenspan, who held the chairmanship of the Federal Reserve during a roughly 20-year period spanning from 1987 to the mid-2000s across four different U.S. presidencies, passed away at age 100. His death resulted from health complications associated with Parkinson's disease, as confirmed by his wife, NBC journalist Andrea Mitchell. The longtime policymaker's influence on financial regulation has become increasingly contentious, with retrospective evaluations divided between those crediting his stewardship during prosperous years and those attributing the foundation of the subsequent financial crisis to his policy approach.
Progressive: Progressive-leaning outlets contextualize Greenspan's death by emphasizing how his market-friendly regulatory approach and inaction enabled the conditions that led to the 2008 financial crisis, framing this as a significant stain on his legacy despite his influence as an economic policymaker.
Moderate: Centrist outlets take a balanced approach in assessing his death, noting both his considerable influence as Federal Reserve chairman and the subsequent criticisms from those who argue his policies contributed to the Global Financial Crisis.
Conservative: Conservative-leaning outlets emphasize Greenspan's influence and status as one of the most powerful figures in global finance and monetary policy, with little to no mention of the 2008 financial crisis or regulatory criticisms.
이 뉴스, 어떠셨어요?
한 번의 탭으로 반응을 남겨요 · 로그인 불필요
Alan Greenspan, who worked with four presidents during his 18-year tenure as chair of the Federal Reserve, died Monday, June 22, 2026, at age 100.
In this Oct.
20, 2013 "Sunday Morning" profile, Greenspan talked with Anthony Mason about what he learned from overseeing the American economy during a period of sustained growth, prior to the 2008 collapse; how to measure irrational human behavior in predicting the market; and how America's economic system is built upon trust, saying, "You break trust down, and the system implodes." Mason also talked with Greenspan's wife, NBC journalist Andrea Mitchell, about her husband's obsession with writing. ...