PEOPLE: Aide to RTC Board Returning to Lobbying

Ms. [Diane M. Casey] directed regulatory affairs at the IBAA from 1985 through 1989. She left the community banker trade group in January to become the RTC Oversight Board's director of public affairs. The diagram, which Mr. [Charles H. Bradford] borrowed from a publication called Personal Fina...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe American banker
Main Author Barbara A. Rehm and Bill Atkinson
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published New York, N.Y SourceMedia 17.09.1990
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Summary:Ms. [Diane M. Casey] directed regulatory affairs at the IBAA from 1985 through 1989. She left the community banker trade group in January to become the RTC Oversight Board's director of public affairs. The diagram, which Mr. [Charles H. Bradford] borrowed from a publication called Personal Finance, featured Mr. [Alan Greenspan] standing in the midst of a contraption with dozens of pulleys and levers, his hand poised to pull the lever labeled "money supply." If Mr. Greenspan pulled the lever to tighten credit, all sorts of pulleys and ropes would begin moving: The prime rate rises, the yield on certificates of deposit and money market funds jumps, and the economy slows. In a speech to the crowd gathered on the FDIC's top floor, Chairman L. William Seidman praised Mr. [Andrew C. "Skip" Hove] as a fine addition to an already exceptional board. In describing the other board members, Mr. Seidman referred to Mr. [Robert L. Clarke] not by name but by the timely appellation, "Mr. 3%."
ISSN:0002-7561
1945-578X