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- 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 intentionally 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.The deliberately confusing and carefully rehearsed cryptic language described as an "indecipherable, Delphic dialect" is meant to "give people a sense that there's no way they could understand economics and finance" and thus allow the Federal Reserve and government to manage the economy with less interference from the general public.Although Ben Bernanke has stated that Fedspeak now means clear and extensive communication of the fed's action, the original interpretation in which Fedspeak meant "explaining more, is understanding better" is still prominently used. It should also be noted that Bernanke's speech has also been described as fedspeak.It has been noted that the nuanced nature of fedspeak poses interpretation problems to automated trading algorithms.".
- Fedspeak wikiPageExternalLink default.htm.
- Fedspeak wikiPageID "28270300".
- Fedspeak wikiPageRevisionID "603897774".
- 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 subject Category:Economics_terminology.
- Fedspeak subject Category:Federal_Reserve.
- 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 intentionally 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=603897774.
- Fedspeak isPrimaryTopicOf Fedspeak.