2006年VOA标准英语-Retiring Federal Reserve Chairman Hailed a(在线收听) |
By Barry Wood
------------------------------------------------ It is a record of extraordinary achievement. Over the past 18 years the American economy averaged 3.1 percent annual growth while the average citizen's wealth rose by 300 percent. Inflation came down and stayed low while the jobless total fell to a very low five percent.
Catherine Mann spent a decade working for Mr. Greenspan at the Federal Reserve. She says it is no surprise that Mr. Greenspan is highly respected. "That's because both the U.S. and global economy did extremely well over his tenure,” said the economist. “For the U.S. economy we had almost no slowdown in economic growth up until 2001." And that slowdown was relatively mild. Mr. Greenspan's skill in calming panicky financial markets was tested on several occasions: from the October 1987 stock market crash, to the late 1990s Asian financial crisis, to the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington in 2001. Here's what he had to say soon after the latter: "Even a subdued recovery beginning soon would constitute a truly remarkable performance for the American economy in the face of so severe a decline in equity asset values and an unprecedented blow from terrorists to the foundations of our market systems." It is the responsibility of a central bank to promote economic growth and employment, to keep inflation low, and safeguard the value of the currency. In recent years Mr. Greenspan has repeatedly urged U.S. policy makers to do something about America's huge budget and trade deficits. "Crafting a budget strategy that meets the nation's longer-run needs will become ever more difficult the more we delay," said Mr. Greenspan to a congressional committee. Fred Bergsten, the former U.S. Treasury official who heads Washington's Institute for International Economics, says that while Mr. Greenspan did an outstanding job, he also made mistakes. Not increasing the margin, meaning requiring stock buyers to use more of their own money to buy shares, allowed more people to buy more equities, thereby driving up demand and prices until they suddenly crashed.
Mr. Greenspan will be succeeded by President Bush's top economic advisor, Ben Bernanke. |
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2006/1/30228.html |