The issue is dubbed Interview Issue, for half of content is about interviews, some of which are highlighted below.
(1) Alan Greenspan Economist. The former Fed chairman talks to Devin Leonard and Peter Coy about Fed-speak, Ayn Rand, and why he quit playing the sax. And then there's his legacy * * *
http://www.businessweek.com/arti ... acy-and-the-economy
(a) Four Q&A:
"[BusinessWeek:] Is there anything you learned during the recent financial crisis that shook you, like that question that Ayn Rand asked you years ago, and changed the way you looked at things?
[Greenspan:] Yes, of course. I was on George Stephanopoulos’s Sunday morning show on Sept. 14, 2008, and he asked me, “Six months ago you were saying that the probability of a recession was greater than 50/50. Do you still believe that?” My answer wasn’t that forthcoming. The fact that question would be asked tells you …
"[BW:] Tells you what?
[G:] That one day before Lehman Brothers crashes, conventional wisdom was not even certain that we would fall into a recession. In fact, we learned many months later that the downward trend had actually started. How could we have possibly got it so wrong? I mean, I actually was saying, 'Yes, recession is coming, Not that we’re here yet.' We didn’t know that it had already hit.
"[BW:] It had actually begun in December 2007.
[G:] That’s what the National Bureau of Economic Research said. But they said it many months later. It wasn’t obvious at that time.
"[BW:] Is it humbling?
[G:] Indeed.
(ii) "[BW:] So you see Greece leaving the euro zone?
[G:] I just donot see how it can stay.
(b) My comment:
(i) The sax refers to saxphone.
(ii) Ayn Rand
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ayn_Rand
(1905-1982; born Alisa Zinov'yevna Rosenbaum in St Peterburg, Russia; moved to the United States in 1926)
(iii) When Greenspan replied to Mr Stephanopoulos, "Not that we’re here yet." The former menat we were not in recession yet, but on the brink.
In late-1990s, I listened to a talk, at MIT's business school, of economics professor Lestor Thurow, who said nobody knew whether it was a bubble, about the good time under President Bill Clinton. Well, the bubble burst around general election of 2000.
|