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The Man Who Knew By Sebastian Mallaby - The Age of American Finance - Full book Summary

1 h 30 min · 28 de mar de 2026
Portada del episodio The Man Who Knew By Sebastian Mallaby - The Age of American Finance - Full book Summary

Descripción

Sebastian Mallaby's The Man Who Knew is one of the most penetrating works of financial biography ever written — a sweeping account of Alan Greenspan's rise from a jazz-playing teenager in the Bronx to the most powerful central banker in the world. Drawing on hundreds of interviews and thousands of pages of previously unreleased Fed transcripts, Mallaby reveals a figure of stunning intellectual complexity: a man who understood economic history deeply, warned presciently about speculative excess, and yet systematically failed to act on his own insights when political and ideological pressures pushed in the opposite direction. The book traces Greenspan's transformation from Ayn Rand's devoted disciple to Washington's indispensable economic oracle — through the Nixon and Ford administrations, the Reagan revolution, the Clinton boom, and the catastrophic unravelling of 2008. Mallaby's central argument is both elegant and devastating: Greenspan's tragedy was not ignorance but the misapplication of knowledge. He was, in the fullest sense, the man who knew — and that makes his failure all the more profound, and all the more instructive for understanding the limits of expertise, ideology, and unchecked technocratic authority in modern democratic life. Thanks for reading Investor’s Substack! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit investorcentraluk.substack.com [https://investorcentraluk.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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episode The Man Who Knew By Sebastian Mallaby - The Age of American Finance - Full book Summary artwork

The Man Who Knew By Sebastian Mallaby - The Age of American Finance - Full book Summary

Sebastian Mallaby's The Man Who Knew is one of the most penetrating works of financial biography ever written — a sweeping account of Alan Greenspan's rise from a jazz-playing teenager in the Bronx to the most powerful central banker in the world. Drawing on hundreds of interviews and thousands of pages of previously unreleased Fed transcripts, Mallaby reveals a figure of stunning intellectual complexity: a man who understood economic history deeply, warned presciently about speculative excess, and yet systematically failed to act on his own insights when political and ideological pressures pushed in the opposite direction. The book traces Greenspan's transformation from Ayn Rand's devoted disciple to Washington's indispensable economic oracle — through the Nixon and Ford administrations, the Reagan revolution, the Clinton boom, and the catastrophic unravelling of 2008. Mallaby's central argument is both elegant and devastating: Greenspan's tragedy was not ignorance but the misapplication of knowledge. He was, in the fullest sense, the man who knew — and that makes his failure all the more profound, and all the more instructive for understanding the limits of expertise, ideology, and unchecked technocratic authority in modern democratic life. Thanks for reading Investor’s Substack! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit investorcentraluk.substack.com [https://investorcentraluk.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

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