Highlights
Paul A. Volcker served two terms as Federal Reserve chairman under Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. While some of Volcker's policies during that time, including rapid increases in interest rates, were considered unpopular, he is credited with helping tame the United States' inflation problems of the 1970s.
Following his leadership role in the Fed, Volcker had been tapped in 2004 to research possible corruption in the United Nations Oil for Food Program. Volcker's latest appointment comes as chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board under President-elect Barack Obama.
Born in 1927 in Cape May, N.J., Volcker earned a bachelor's degree from Princet...
Following his leadership role in the Fed, Volcker had been tapped in 2004 to research possible corruption in the United Nations Oil for Food Program. Volcker's latest appointment comes as chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board under President-elect Barack Obama.
Born in 1927 in Cape May, N.J., Volcker earned a bachelor's degree from Princet...
Paul A. Volcker served two terms as Federal Reserve chairman under Presidents Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan. While some of Volcker's policies during that time, including rapid increases in interest rates, were considered unpopular, he is credited with helping tame the United States' inflation problems of the 1970s.
Following his leadership role in the Fed, Volcker had been tapped in 2004 to research possible corruption in the United Nations Oil for Food Program. Volcker's latest appointment comes as chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board under President-elect Barack Obama.
Born in 1927 in Cape May, N.J., Volcker earned a bachelor's degree from Princeton and a master's from the Harvard University Graduate School of Public Administration. Before leading the Federal Reserve, he served as chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Following his leadership role in the Fed, Volcker had been tapped in 2004 to research possible corruption in the United Nations Oil for Food Program. Volcker's latest appointment comes as chairman of the President's Economic Recovery Advisory Board under President-elect Barack Obama.
Born in 1927 in Cape May, N.J., Volcker earned a bachelor's degree from Princeton and a master's from the Harvard University Graduate School of Public Administration. Before leading the Federal Reserve, he served as chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
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US regulators adopt weakened rule on derivatives trading; critics say large banks to benefit
AP Business WriterWASHINGTON (AP) — A rule intended to loosen the largest U.S. banks' control over the trading of complex investments and help safeguard the financial system was weakened Thursday by regulators. Critics say the changes will allow major Wall Street...Tags: Wells Fargo & Co., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Citigroup Incorporated, Finance, U.S. Congress
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Pimco's Gross: 'Gut feeling' that bond bull run is done
ReutersNEW YORK (Reuters) - Circle the date, market mavens: April 29, 2013. AKA, the day the bond bull died. Age 31 years, 7 months. That, at least, is the call from Bill Gross, who is known on Wall Street as "the Bond King." Gross, the manager of the world'...Tags: Thomson Corporation, Money and Monetary Policy, Finance, S&P 500, Central Bank
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How do you spell Singapore without 'LKY'?
ReutersBy John O'Callaghan SINGAPORE, April 22 (Reuters) - They crammed into an art cafe in Singapore and pulled no punches, deriding authoritarian officials who ruled with an "iron fist" and complaining that government ministers with million-dollar salaries...Tags: Elections, Government, Politics, Parliament, National Government
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George Soros, enigmatic financier, liberal philanthropist dies at XX
ReutersBy Todd Eastham WASHINGTON, XXX (Reuters) - George Soros, who died XXX at age XXX, was a predatory and hugely successful financier and investor, who argued paradoxically for years against the same sort of free-wheeling capitalism that made him billions....Tags: United Kingdom, Currency Values, France, Tra Thomas, Finance
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How we got into this mess
WASHINGTON -- Blame it on JFK. Fifty years ago, President Kennedy made a decision that, with hindsight, ranks as the biggest mistake of domestic policy since World War II. In many ways, it led directly to today's "sequester" debacle. What Kennedy...
Tags: John F. Kennedy, Interior Policy, Politics, Budgets and Budgeting, Career and Workplace
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Jerry Brown skips White House gathering for New York meetings
SACRAMENTO -- Gov. Jerry Brown skipped a meeting at the White House on Monday and hopped a train for New York, where he will meet with a former Treasury secretary and a past chairman of the Federal Reserve. Instead of attending the White House session...Tags: Executive Branch, White House, Government, New York University, Politics
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Trickle down economics really work
Among the mystifying contentions of President Obama, his acolytes, and supporters is that, "We've tried trickle-down economics and it doesn't work." Really? What history books have they been reading? World War II got American industrial production into...Tags: Gerald Ford, John F. Kennedy, Parties and Movements, Money and Monetary Policy, Politics
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Unmasking the most influential billionaire in U.S. politics
Who's the most influential billionaire business figure in national politics? If you answered one of the Koch brothers (Charles or David) or George Soros, you're wearing your partisan blinders. The former are known for their devotion to conservative...Tags: Health Insurance Cost, American Enterprise Institute, Government Health Care, Politics, Richard Nixon
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Thursday Morning Coffee: The five things you need to know this morning.
Capitol Ideas with John L. MicekGood Thursday Morning, Fellow Seekers. Well here we are again: into the final furlong before what's shaping up to be another scorcher of a July weekend. At times like this, we find ourselves wishing we lived in 1920s France and...... -
New report details the six gravest threats to states' fiscal stability.
Capitol Ideas with John L. MicekThe national economy might be slowly rebounding, but state governments still face serious threats to their bottom lines, including the runaway Medicaid spending, growing public pension obligations and a hobbled ability to raise new tax revenues, a new... -
Allan Powell: Classical economics hits a 'bump'
The recent disclosure of JP Morgan Chase’s losses of more than $2 billion in a few weeks generated two types of alarm. One was that we were too lax in our regulatory measures that restrain risky investment bank speculation. Others were alarmed about...Tags: Christopher Dodd, Investment Service, Litigation and Regulation, Investments, Business Enterprises
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May 16, 2013
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Feb 25, 2013
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Oct 21, 2012
|Column| South Florida Sun-Sentinel
Oct 2, 2012
|Column| Los Angeles Times
Jul 19, 2012
| Allentown Morning Call
Jul 18, 2012
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Jun 1, 2012
|Story| Herald Mail
Nov 29, 2011
|Story| Allentown Morning Call
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