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Keywords: Yellen, U.S. Federal Reserve, U.S. Interest Rate,
Janet Yellen brings a remarkable change of tone at the Fed as she listens to unemployed workers, listens carefully to committee members, speaks at the end of meetings careful to summarize varying opinion, and calms volatile financial markets in 2014.
Grouped Articles
Yellen’s First Year at Fed: A Remarkably Steady Course
New York Times 12/22/2014
The New Jobs Report Shows Janet Yellen’s Quandary in a Nutshell
New York Times 03/06/2015
Joel Peterson of JetBlue on Listening Without an Agenda
New York Times 05/09/2015
Janet Yellen and Fed Predecessors Find Common Ground Onstage
New York Times 04/07/2016
Years of Fed Missteps Fueled Disillusion With the Economy and Washington
WSJ 08/26/2016
Fed, With 3 Officials in Dissent, Stands Firm on Interest Rates While Noting Improving Economy
The New York Times 09/21/2016
Grouped Articles
Janet Yellen: Fed on Track for 2015 Rate Hike
Wall Street Journal 07/11/2015
Quotes from Janet Yellen at the City Club of Cleveland
Wall Street Journal 07/11/2015
Yellen Expects Fed to Raise Rates This Year
New York Times 07/10/2015
Years of Fed Missteps Fueled Disillusion With the Economy and Washington
WSJ 08/26/2016
Fed, With 3 Officials in Dissent, Stands Firm on Interest Rates While Noting Improving Economy
The New York Times 09/21/2016
By missing the signals of the bubble in financial markets and letting the mortgage crisis develop upto the point that the overleveraged banks had to be rescued and the global economy went into a deep recession, the U.S. Fed created the conditions for the populist movements of 2016. Very low rates designed to help the economy recover hurt savers, further depressing the financial assets of the middle and working class. The lack of access to public colleges hurt upward mobility, and the high cost of tution led to parents assuming large amounts of student debt further depressing their condition. The assets of middle and working class people revealed at a Boston Fed sponsored Inequality conference in Oct. 2014 were shocking- the average net worth of the lower half of the distribution in the U.S., or 62 million households was an average of $11,000, with one quarter at zero net worth, according to Janet Yellen, the chairman of the Fed, America's central bank.
Grouped Articles
Years of Fed Missteps Fueled Disillusion With the Economy and Washington
WSJ 08/26/2016
From Trump to Brexit rhetoric: how today's politicians have got away with words
The Guardian 08/27/2016
Apple should repay Ireland 13bn euros, European Commission rules - BBC News
BBC News 08/30/2016
Apple must now pay its taxes. This is a vindication of protest | Owen Jones
The Guardian 08/30/2016
The Economic Expansion Is Helping the Middle Class, Finally
The New York Times 09/13/2016
Fed, With 3 Officials in Dissent, Stands Firm on Interest Rates While Noting Improving Economy
The New York Times 09/21/2016
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