Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Fedspeak> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 80 of
80
with 100 triples per page.
- Fedspeak abstract "In monetary policy of the United States, the term Fedspeak (also known as Greenspeak) is what Alan Blinder called "a turgid dialect of English" used by Federal Reserve Board chairmen in making wordy, vague, and ambiguous statements. The strategy, which was used most prominently by Alan Greenspan, was used to prevent financial markets from overreacting to the chairman's remarks. The coinage is an intentional parallel to Newspeak of Nineteen Eighty-Four, a novel by George Orwell.Fedspeak when used by Alan Greenspan is often called Greenspeak. An alternative definition of Greenspeak is "The coded and careful language employed by U.S. Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan."Edwin le Heron and Emmanuel Carre state that "Nowadays, 'Fedspeak’ (Bernanke, 2004) means clear and extensive communication of the Fed’s action." Chairman Ben Bernanke and Chairwoman Yellen have effected a major change in Fed communication policy departing from the obfuscation that characterized the previous three decades. In 2014 a new detailed level of Fed communication was dubbed Fedspeak 3.0".
- Fedspeak wikiPageExternalLink 19961205.htm.
- Fedspeak wikiPageExternalLink default.htm.
- Fedspeak wikiPageID "28270300".
- Fedspeak wikiPageLength "16567".
- Fedspeak wikiPageOutDegree "38".
- Fedspeak wikiPageRevisionID "650266909".
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink 60_Minutes.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Blinder.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Alan_Greenspan.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Burns.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_F._Burns.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Ben_Bernanke.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Bloomberg_Businessweek.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink BusinessWeek.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink CNBC.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Casey_Stengel.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Category:Economics_terminology.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Category:Federal_Reserve.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Federal_Reserve.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Federal_Reserve_Bank_of_Dallas.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Federal_Reserve_System.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink George_Orwell.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Hubert_H._Humphrey.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Hubert_Humphrey.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Index_of_public_relations-related_articles.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Irrational_exuberance.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Janet_Yellen.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Lesley_Stahl.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Maria_Bartiromo.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Monetary_policy_of_the_United_States.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Newspeak.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Nineteen_Eighty-Four.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Obscurantism.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Obscurantist.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Outline_of_public_relations.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Owen_Bennett-Jones.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Volcker.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Public_relations.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Ron_Insana.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Rosetta_Stone_(software).
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Security_through_obfuscation.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Security_through_obscurity.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Self-fulfilling_prophecy.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink Technobabble.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink The_Age_of_Turbulence.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink US_House_of_Representatives.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLink United_States_House_of_Representatives.
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fed-speak".
- Fedspeak wikiPageWikiLinkText "Fedspeak".
- Fedspeak hasPhotoCollection Fedspeak.
- Fedspeak sign Alan_Greenspan.
- Fedspeak source "--02-13".
- Fedspeak source "--07-20".
- Fedspeak source "Greenspan describing the weather in response to a question by Owen Bennett-Jones on BBC's The Interview".
- Fedspeak text "I would generally expect that today in Washington DC. the probability of changes in the weather is highly uncertain, but we are monitoring the data in such a way that we will be able to update people on changes that are important.".
- Fedspeak text "Risk takers have been encouraged by a perceived increase in economic stability to reach out to more distant time horizons. But long periods of relative stability often engender unrealistic expectations of it[s] permanence and, at times, may lead to financial excess and economic stress.".
- Fedspeak text "The members of the Board of Governors and the Reserve Bank presidents foresee an implicit strengthening of activity after the current rebalancing is over, although the central tendency of their individual forecasts for real GDP still shows a substantial slowdown, on balance, for the year as a whole.".
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:.
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:%22.
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_journal.
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Federal_Reserve_System.
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Quote.
- Fedspeak wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Fedspeak subject Category:Economics_terminology.
- Fedspeak subject Category:Federal_Reserve.
- Fedspeak type Article.
- Fedspeak type Bank.
- Fedspeak type Agency.
- Fedspeak type Article.
- Fedspeak type Bank.
- Fedspeak comment "In monetary policy of the United States, the term Fedspeak (also known as Greenspeak) is what Alan Blinder called "a turgid dialect of English" used by Federal Reserve Board chairmen in making wordy, vague, and ambiguous statements. The strategy, which was used most prominently by Alan Greenspan, was used to prevent financial markets from overreacting to the chairman's remarks.".
- Fedspeak label "Fedspeak".
- Fedspeak sameAs Fedspeak.
- Fedspeak sameAs 페드스피크.
- Fedspeak sameAs m.0cp0_n4.
- Fedspeak sameAs Q5441143.
- Fedspeak sameAs Q5441143.
- Fedspeak wasDerivedFrom Fedspeak?oldid=650266909.
- Fedspeak isPrimaryTopicOf Fedspeak.