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The strongest reason to mourn Volcker: He was willing to be unpopular December 9, 2019 More than 5 years ago Former Federal Reserve chairman Paul Volcker, shown in 2008, died Sunday at 92.
A Conversation with Paul Volcker Aired 12/7/2000 Before the economic boom of the 1980's and long before any talk of a "new economy" there was stagflation and malaise.
With not an insignificant amount of fanfare last week, former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker endorsed Barack Obama s presidential candidacy. His endorsement drew more attention than it normally might ...
Later this week Paul Volcker, the man who helped guide the U.S. through two of its most serious recent economic crises, will step down as the chairman of the President’s Economic Advisory Board ...
When President Obama named his financial reform plan the Volcker Rule, it catapulted the former Fed chief into the role of populist hero. But he is no populist, Paul Volcker insists.
Paul Volcker is the head of President Barack Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory Board. He previously served two terms as chairman of the Federal Reserve from 1979 to 1987. Volcker was chairman of ...
The Fed under Ben Bernanke opened the monetary spigots; the Fed under Paul Volcker shut them off—and ended an inflation crisis. James Grant reviews “Keeping At It” by Paul A. Volcker.
Paul Volcker, who died in December at the age of 92, was the most enduring and important financial policymakers of the post-Bretton Woods era.
The Wall Street Journal writes that Paul Volcker admits that the political class is preparing to pass a European-style value-added tax.
Paul Volcker, the most important Fed chair of the 20th century, has died Volcker caused two recessions — and ended the 1970s era of high inflation in the US.
Former Fed chief: Inflation isn't dead Paul Volcker, the Fed chairman in the early 1980s, says rising prices and weak dollar are big concerns for the economy.
« Back to A Conversation with Paul Volcker main page Transcript for: A Conversation with Paul Volcker THINK TANK WITH HOST: BEN WATTENBERG SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 2000 ANNOUNCER: Funding for Think ...
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