Former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan dies at age 100
The influential economist, born in New York, headed the FED between 1987 and 2006.
Alan Greenspan, the former head of the US Federal Reserve, passed away this Monday at the age of one hundred, according to US media reviews.
Between 1987 and 2006, Greenspan led the FED and was born in New York in March 1926.
According to his family Andrea Mitchell, the chief Washington editor and chief foreign affairs correspondent for NBC News, Greenspan, an influential economist who served on the Federal Reserve for about five term, has passed away from Parkinson's disease complications.
During the administrations of Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, and George W. Bush, Greenspan, who was known as the" Master," was in charge of the Fed.
Before songs, Greenspan's life was that of a stockbroker's boy. The New York analyst played saxophone and clarinet in the Henry Jerome band while studying flute at the prestigious Juilliard School, where composer John Williams graduated.
He left the country and pursued a career in financial sciences, where he received his 1948 degree.
He was nominated by the Democratic presidential campaign in 1968 after serving in Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan's governments as the head of the US Federal Reserve. Disobedience
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