At the age of 100, Alan Greenspan, the economist who led the Federal Reserve for almost 20 years and rose to prominence in the world of international finance, passed away on Monday. NBC News correspondent Andrea Mitchell, his 29-year-old wife, confirmed his passing in a statement. Parkinson’s disease complications claimed his life at their house.
Only a few months prior, in March 2026, he had celebrated his centennial. A man who studied long cycles and slow-moving forces throughout his career and lived long enough to witness a full century of global change seems almost fitting.
Mitchell made a succinct but kind statement that only a spouse can make. He was “a giant of a man” who was “always honest in acknowledging his mistakes,” she said, adding almost tenderly that he had “irrational exuberance” for jazz, baseball, tennis, and golf. A Washington Post column once stated that “with a couple of choice words, he can momentarily send the stock market to heaven or hell.” This small detail humanizes a person who, for the majority of his working life, appeared to exist on a different plane than ordinary people.

Credit: Bloomberg Television
In August 1987, Ronald Reagan named Greenspan chairman of the Federal Reserve. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell more than 22% in a single day on October 19, two months later; this event is still referred to as “Black Monday.” He had hardly gotten used to the work. The following morning, he responded by declaring that the Fed was prepared to support financial systems, which is credited with stabilizing markets and initiating what became a defining characteristic of his tenure: calm authority in times of chaos.
He led the American economy through a remarkable period of events over the next eighteen and a half years, including the dot-com boom, the savings and loan crisis, the September 11 attacks, the failure of Long-Term Capital Management, and more. The unemployment rate dropped to less than 4%. Deficits were replaced by budget surpluses. When he was at his best, he was referred to as “the Maestro,” a moniker that had an air of mystery that few public personalities have ever been able to match.
It turned out that his renownedly impenetrable public language was completely intentional. Years later, he acknowledged that he had developed a habit of crafting sentences so complex and multi-layered that even astute congressional interlocutors would nod in agreement and move on to their next query. Strategic confusion was a peculiar form of power. And for a very long time, it was effective.
What happened after he left is the more difficult aspect of his legacy. He kept interest rates low in the early 2000s following the dot-com bust and September 11, which contributed to the housing market’s eventual spectacular collapse in 2007 and 2008. In his congressional testimony, Greenspan described the crisis as “much broader than anything I could have imagined.” He admitted that his long-held conviction that financial institutions could be relied upon to self-regulate was a flaw in his worldview. For someone of his caliber, it was an incredible moment of public admission. It was too late, according to his detractors. His supporters pointed out that he said it at all.
A young man from Washington Heights attended the Juilliard School to study clarinet and played in a band with jazz saxophonist Stan Getz before all of this, before the Fed, the presidents, and the financial crises. While his fellow musicians sought other ways to pass the time, he took the band’s accounting work seriously. More than any other detail, it seems to reveal something about his personality.
Andrea Mitchell, who survived him, put it this way: “Being his life partner was the joy of my life.”

