One Group’s Fight for Understandable Language
29 April 2010
Two former officials at Goldman Sachs, Daniel Sparks, left, and Joshua Birnbaum, right on Wednesday during a meeting with lawmakers
This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.
Sometimes, financial news can be hard to understand. Here, a former official of Goldman Sachs investment bank explains what his group did before the financial crisis.
JOSH BIRNBAUM: “Our desk began to accumulate short positions, purchasing protection on individual securities through credit default swaps, largely from external C.D.O. managers who asked us to bid for these positions.”
Josh Birnbaum was involved in synthetic C.D.O.s. These are really financial bets on whether some asset will gain or lose value. They are at the heart of the government’s case against Goldman Sachs for misleading investors. Senator Claire McCaskill described synthetic C.D.O.s during a Senate subcommittee hearing.
CLAIRE MCCASKILL: “Let me just explain in very simple terms what synthetic C.D.O.s are. They are instruments that are created so that people can bet on them.”
The purpose of language is to communicate information. But it can often hide meaning. Have you ever agreed to the “terms of use” for a service without reading it all?
Annetta Cheek heads the Center for Plain Language in Silver Spring, Maryland. Her non-profit group has been working for more understandable language in government and business since two thousand four.
最新
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25
2013-11-25