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TESTIMONY OF FEDERAL RESERVE OFFICIALS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, discusses recent developments in the U.S. economy and states that despite the tragic events of September 11, the foundations of our free society remain sound, and we will recover and prosper as we have in the past. He states further that the level of productivity will presumably undergo a onetime downward adjustment as our economy responds to higher levels of perceived risk, but once the adjustment is completed, productivity growth should resume at rates in excess of those that prevailed in the quarter-century preceding 1995 (Testimony before the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress, October 17, 2001).
Online Contents | 2001| -
TESTIMONY OF FEDERAL RESERVE OFFICIALS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses the condition of the U.S. banking system and testifies that in recent years, we have incorporated innovative ideas and accommodated significant change in banking and supervision. He states further that building on bank practice, we are in the process of improving both lending and supervisory policies that will foster better risk management; and perhaps these policies could also reduce the pro-cyclical pattern of easing and tightening of bank lending and accordingly increase bank shareholder values and economic stability (Testimony before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, June 20, 2001).
Online Contents | 2001| -
Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, presents the Board's report on monetary policy and testifies that the Federal Reserve has been confronting a complex set of challenges in judging the stance of policy that will best contribute to sustaining the strong and long-running expansion of our economy and that the challenges will be no less in coming months. Further, he states that irrespective of the complexities of economic change, the primary goal of the Federal Reserve is to find those policies that best contribute to a non-inflationary environment and hence to growth (Testimony before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, July 20, 2000. Chairman Greenspan presented identical testimony before the House Committee on Banking and Financial Services on July 25, 2000)
Online Contents | 2000| -
Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses the evolution of U.S. equity markets and the appropriate role for policymakers in this period of rapid change and states his confidence in competition as the fundamental guide to the organization of those markets. He further testifies that in the long run, activity will migrate to the systems that best meet the needs of investors, absent impediments to competition; in the short run, policymakers should seek to remove impediments to competition and take judicious steps to mitigate the adverse effects of market fragmentation through policies such as enhanced disclosure (Testimony before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, April 13, 2000)
Online Contents | 2000| -
Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses his views on improving mathematics and science education in U.S. elementary and secondary schools and states that with the conceptual demands on our workers continuing to rise, substantial further progress needs to be made in raising the analytic competency of our graduating high-school seniors. He testifies further that we must strive to increase math and science achievement so that our students can take advantage of the considerable opportunities that will exist in tomorrow's labor market (Testimony before the House Committee on Education and the Workforce, September 21, 2000)
Online Contents | 2000| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses the options available for placing social security and Medicare on a firmer fiscal footing and states that increasing our national saving is essential to any successful reform of social security or Medicare; he testifies further that the most important decision facing policy-makers today is not about the distribution of future resources but about the level of future resources available for future workers and retirees and that the most effective means of raising the level of future resources is to allow the budget surpluses projected in the coming years to be used to pay down the nation's debt (Testimony before the Senate Special Committee on Aging, March 27, 2000)
Online Contents | 2000| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, comments on the fiscal situation and says that much hard work remains to be done to ensure that the projected surpluses in the federal budget actually materialize and that we remain on track to address our longer-run fiscal and demographic challenges and that he has always emphasized that we should be aiming for budgetary surpluses and using the proceeds to retire outstanding federal debt, before the Senate Committee on the Budget, January 29, 1998.
Online Contents | 1998| -
Chairman Greenspan discusses the recent financial crisis in Asia and says that the root of the problems is poor public policy that has resulted in misguided investments and very weak financial sectors and further that convincing a sovereign nation to alter destructive policies that impair its own performance and threaten contagion to its neighbors is best handled by an international financial institution, such as the IMF; also, to reduce the risk of systemic crises in today's environment, an enhanced regime of market incentives, involving greater sensitivity to market signals, more information to make those signals more robust, and broader securities markets--coupled with better supervision--are essential, before the House Committee on Banking and Financial Services, January 30, 1998.
Online Contents | 1998| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, discusses the Federal Reserve's semiannual report to the Congress on monetary policy and also the issue of the bias in the consumer price index (CPI). Before the House Committee on the Budget, March 4, 1997.
Online Contents | 1997| -
Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, presents the views of the Board on the Financial Services Competition Act of 1997 and says that although the Board supports the overall thrust of the Banking Committee bill, it is nonetheless concerned that the bill goes unnecessarily far at this time in mixing commerce and banking and that permitting banks to conduct new activities in their own subsidiaries is unwise because of the extension of the safety net subsidy directly to those subsidiaries; also, the Board should continue to have consolidated oversight responsibility for most holding companies, before the Subcommittee on Finance and Hazardous Materials of the House Committee on Commerce, July 17, 1997.
Online Contents | 1997| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Chairman Greenspan highlights some of the key aspects of the current economic situation and says that the current expansion, now entering its seventh year, is a long upswing by historical standards, and yet, in looking ahead the prospects for sustaining the expansion are quite favorable. of the U.S. Congress, March 20, 1997.
Online Contents | 1997| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, offers some personal perspectives on the current economic situation and says that the current cyclical upswing is now approaching six years in duration with the economy retaining considerable vigor and few signs of the imbalances and inflationary tensions that have disrupted past expansions, before the Senate Committee on the Budget, January 21, 1997.
Online Contents | 1997| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses the global financial system and the current Asian crisis and says that he fully backs the Administration's request to augment the financial resources of the International Monetary Fund by approving as quickly as possible U.S. participation in the New Arrangements to Borrow and an increase in the U.S. quota in the IMF; hopefully neither will turn out to be needed and no funds will be drawn, before the Subcommittee on Foreign Operations of the Senate Committee on Appropriations, March 3, 1998.
Online Contents | 1998| -
STATEMENTS TO THE CONGRESS - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses adapting Medicare to meet our long-run needs and says that the consensus among economists is that technology is a driving force behind rising medical costs and that a structure that provides appropriate incentives for the development and application of technology is key to a well-functioning health care system, before the National Bipartisan Commission on the Future of Medicare, April 20, 1998.
Online Contents | 1998| -
Statement To The Congress - Alan Greenspan, Chairman, Board of Governors, discusses the performance of the U.S. economy in the first half of 1996 and the conduct of monetary policy and says that even though the U.S. economy is using its productive resources intensively, inflation has remained quiescent and that looking forward, there are a number of reasons to expect demands to moderate and economic activity to settle back toward a more sustainable pace in the months ahead, before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, July 18, 1996.
Online Contents | 1996|
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