Robert Rubin

Robert Rubin
Robert Edward Rubinis an American lawyer, former cabinet member, and retired banking executive. He served as the 70th United States Secretary of the Treasury during the Clinton administration. Before his government service, he spent 26 years at Goldman Sachs, eventually serving as a member of the board and co-chairman from 1990 to 1992; Rubin oversaw the loosening of financial industry underwriting guidelines which had been intact since the 1930s. His most prominent post-government role was as director and senior counselor...
ProfessionPolitician
Date of Birth29 August 1938
CityNew York City, NY
I'm saying that we have significant concerns about significant portions ? of this, ... We need to work with Congress to work our way through that.
I had three criteria: I didn't want to be a CEO, I wanted to be involved with an institution I was proud of, and I wanted to be involved in an institution that was important to me,
I may have implied that in some sense we have taken intervention off the table. That certainly would not have been a correct implication,
The new $20 note will be an important tool against would-be counterfeiters,
In principal, we would not view a combination between the two companies as a bad thing.
I'd really like to help in any way that I can,
I'm not going to get into the business of market prognostication,
The fundamentals of the United States economy are strong due in part to the sound policies we've been following. The prospects for growth, low unemployment, low inflation continue to be strong.
the financial architecture of the 21 st century, an architecture that is as modern as the markets.
The implications of Hurricane Katrina are clearly not positive for the Entergy enterprise, as the company's operations were the hardest hit of any electric utility system,
The important thing is for countries to stay on a sensible economic path as the world works through a very difficult time. What Japan does is very important to the rest of the world,
You've got a lot of proposals that have been advocated by a lot of people,
The floating exchange rate system is the worst possible system, except for all the others,
the focus will be very largely on Japan and the urgent importance of Japan implementing effective measures to lead to a sustained, domestic, demand-led growth, which is critical not only for the Japanese people but for the people of Asia and, indeed, for recovery in the rest of the world.