Alan Greenspan Dies: Longtime Federal Reserve Chairman Was 100
Alan Greenspan, who led the Federal Reserve under four presidents, steering the economy through unprecedented growth but also unnerving crisis, has died. He was 100. Greenspanโs wife, NBC News chief W
Alan Greenspan, who led the Federal Reserve under four presidents, steering the economy through unprecedented growth but also unnerving crisis, has di
Read Full Story at Deadline Hollywood โWhy This Matters
Alan Greenspanโs death marks the end of an era in economic policymaking, where his influence stretched far beyond interest rates to shape global finance, market psychology, and the very architecture of modern capitalism. His tenure coincided with the unraveling of Cold War financial systems, the rise of deregulated markets, and the birth of the digital economyโmaking his legacy a lens to understand how economic orthodoxy evolved in the late 20th century.
Background Context
Appointed by Ronald Reagan in 1987, Greenspan became the Fedโs longest-serving chairman, steering the U.S. through the 1987 stock market crash, the savings-and-loan crisis, the dot-com bubble, and the 2008 financial meltdownโeach time reinforcing the Fedโs role as the ultimate backstop of stability. His reputation as a maestro was built on a cult of data-driven infallibility, though his later tenure would be scrutinized for blind spots, including the housing bubble and the risks of unchecked financial innovation.
What Happens Next
Greenspanโs absence removes a key historical reference point for policymakers grappling with inflation, debt, and the Fedโs expanded remit in climate finance and inequality. His intellectual heirsโwhether in central banking or financial circlesโwill now debate whether his model of technocratic control over markets remains viable in an era of populist distrust and multi-polar economic threats.
Bigger Picture
Greenspanโs career reflects the tension between technocratic governance and democratic accountability in economics, a debate that has only intensified with the rise of cryptocurrencies and algorithmic trading. His legacy forces a reckoning with whether the Fedโs toolsโonce seen as precision instrumentsโcan address structural crises like climate change or geopolitical fragmentation.

