2026-06-22 17:37:36 / 路透社
华盛顿6月22日电(路透社)——已故前美国联邦储备委员会主席艾伦·格林斯潘作为央行行长最显著的特质,以及后来被证明是他最大盲点的决策逻辑,即将在新任主席凯文·沃尔什的任上重演。
正如这位周一去世、且沃尔什在一个月前的白宫就职仪式上四次提及的“大师”一样,沃尔什不愿过多表态,而是信任金融市场能够自行理清局势。
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这套行事逻辑帮助格林斯潘在担任美联储主席的18年多时间里,维持了大部分时期的温和通胀与稳定增长,这一时期也被称为“大缓和”时代。
但这也让他忽视了房地产泡沫的迹象,理由是最顶尖金融机构的精英人士不会系统性地错误定价资产或忽视系统性风险。格林斯潘卸任后不久,一场起源于美国次级抵押贷款市场的危机席卷了全球金融体系,随后他在国会听证会上承认,自己关于理性有效市场的思维存在“缺陷”。
布鲁金斯学会高级研究员唐纳德·科恩曾是格林斯潘时期的美联储核心幕僚,后来升任美联储副主席,他在周一发表的悼念文章中写道,享年100岁的格林斯潘因帕金森病并发症在家中去世,他“能够从往往晦涩的零散数据中发掘洞见,偶尔还能以精妙的方式将这些数据串联起来,令人折服又捉摸不透”。
但科恩指出,尽管注意到部分地区房价快速上涨,格林斯潘“怀疑这些市场会出现全国性泡沫,因此他并未利用自己的话语权或银行监管权预先构建抗风险能力”。
危机过后,预防性监管成为主流,多德-弗兰克改革法案要求银行建立更高的资本缓冲、制定恢复与处置计划,并在美联储和联邦政府更严格的监管下采取其他措施,确保任何银行都不会被认为“大而不能倒”,进而迫使未来纳税人出手救助。
如今,美联储负责监管的副主席米歇尔·鲍曼正在放松部分监管要求,而沃尔什也曾表示,他的目标之一就是缩小美联储的干预范围。
“摘掉眼罩”
沃尔什将格林斯潘视为其担任主席一职的核心影响者,在5月22日的就职仪式上多次向其致敬,并将自己关于经济以及美联储恰当角色的标志性观点,与格林斯潘的知名立场联系起来。
其中包括大幅缩减央行行长对于 inherently uncertain future 的谈论幅度、频率和具体程度。格林斯潘曾以不表态、甚至晦涩难懂为荣,以此获得更自由的空间来应对新动态,而沃尔什则表示,美联储当前凡事都要解释清楚的倾向,可能会束缚政策制定者的手脚。
美联储新任主席上任后的首份政策声明于上周发布,恢复了简洁的格式,并删除了关于政策未来路径的明确指引。
但在关键时刻,沃尔什也愿意就未来发表看法。在就职前的几个月里,他曾指出,格林斯潘在1990年代中期准确预判到生产率上升将有助于缓解通胀,并反对当时同僚中越来越多的加息呼声。
沃尔什表示,目前人工智能技术的普及可能正在催生类似的局面,他已在就职主席之初设立的五个专项工作组中,指派了一个负责研究生产率问题。
沃尔什表示,他希望推行的这些及其他改革,都围绕着一个格林斯潘大概率会认可的理念:美联储不应假装自己是市场上唯一的参与者,而应将自身角色限定在最狭窄的范围内,让家庭、企业和投资者自行解决其余问题。
在缩减2007-2009年危机后出台的各项措施时,比如美联储庞大的资产负债表和扩张的沟通政策,沃尔什现在必须决定,在格林斯潘本人承认自己出错的领域,他的改革力度该有多大。
在首场新闻发布会上,沃尔什表示,至少在初期,最好是美联储对市场做出反应,而非市场对过于健谈的美联储做出反应。
“金融市场在对 incoming data 做出反应时表现最佳。我认为,当金融市场总在问‘美联储会如何应对这些新信息?’时,市场的运行效率会更低。”沃尔什说,“当所有金融市场都只是在反射我们的言论时,我们就会错失最重要的信息来源。我希望我们能建立一个摘掉眼罩的体系,让市场追随它们认为可靠的有效数据。”
霍华德·施奈德报道;安德里亚·里奇编辑
Greenspan playbook to get a replay under Warsh
2026-06-22 17:37:36 / Reuters
WASHINGTON, June 22 (Reuters) – Some of the late former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan’s most noted attributes as a central banker as well as what proved his greatest blind spot are about to get a replay under new Chairman Kevin Warsh.
Like “the maestro” — who died on Monday and whom Warsh cited four times during his White House swearing-in ceremony exactly one month ago — Warsh is reluctant to say too much while trusting financial markets to figure things out on their own.
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It was a recipe that helped sustain tame inflation and steady growth for most of Greenspan’s more than 18 years as head of the U.S. central bank, so much so the era was dubbed the “Great Moderation.”
But it also led him to downplay signs of a housing bubble on grounds that the smartest people at the richest financial institutions would not systemically misprice assets or overlook systemic risks. A crisis with roots in the U.S. subprime mortgage market overwhelmed the global financial system shortly after Greenspan left office, and led him to acknowledge in congressional hearings “a flaw” in his thinking about rational and efficient markets.
Greenspan, who died at his home from complications of Parkinson’s disease at age 100, “could dazzle and puzzle” by “finding insight in often obscure pieces of data, occasionally combining these series in wondrous ways,” Brookings Institution Senior Fellow Donald Kohn, a top Fed staffer under Greenspan and eventual Fed vice chair, wrote
in an appreciation
published on Monday.
But despite noting the fast rise in some local housing prices, Kohn noted, Greenspan “doubted a national bubble across these markets, and he did little with his soapbox or powers over bank regulation to preemptively build resilience.”
Preemptive regulation became the order of the day in the wake of the crisis, with the Dodd-Frank slate of reforms forcing banks to build larger capital buffers, create resolution plans, and take other steps under closer Fed and federal government scrutiny so that none would ever be considered so big they could not be allowed to fail — and force future taxpayer bailouts.
Some of that is now being loosened under Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman, and Warsh has said one of his aims is to pare back the Fed’s imprint.
‘BLINDERS COME OFF’
Warsh has cited Greenspan as a major influence over his approach to the chairman’s job, paying homage to him repeatedly during his May 22 swearing-in, and has related some of his signature views about the economy and the proper role of the Fed to positions Greenspan was noted for.
Those include a more truncated view of how much, how frequently, and how specifically central bankers should talk about an inherently uncertain future. Greenspan prided himself on being noncommittal, even obscure, as a way to be freer to respond to new developments, and Warsh has said he feels the Fed’s current inclination to explain itself risks tying the hands of policymakers.
The first policy statement under the Fed’s new chairman, issued last week, returned to a shorter format and stripped out explicit guidance about the future path of policy.
Yet he has also been willing to talk about the future when it matters, and in the months prior to his swearing-in noted how Greenspan in the mid-1990s pinpointed that rising productivity would help ease inflation — and argued against rate hikes that were gathering support among his colleagues.
Warsh says a similar dynamic may be developing now due to the spread of artificial intelligence technologies, and has assigned a study of productivity to one of the five task forces he has appointed at the outset of his chairmanship.
Those and other reforms Warsh says he wants to pursue are organized around an idea Greenspan would likely endorse: that the central bank shouldn’t posture as the only player in town, but keep its role as narrow as possible and let households, businesses and investors sort out the rest.
In dialing back things that grew out of the 2007-2009 crisis, like the Fed’s large balance sheet and its expanded communications policy, Warsh must now decide how far that goes in the one area where Greenspan himself said he got it wrong.
In his opening press conference, Warsh said that at the outset at least, it’s best if the Fed is reacting to markets rather than markets reacting to an overly chatty Fed.
“Financial markets perform best when they react to incoming data. I think the financial markets work less efficiently when they ask a question. How will the Federal Reserve react to that incoming information?” Warsh said. “When all the financial markets are doing is reflecting back what we’ve said, then we’re taking the most important source of information and we’re being blind to it. I’d like us to create a system where those blinders come off, where markets are following data that they efficiently think is reliable.”
Reporting by Howard Schneider; Editing by Andrea Ricci
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