Former Treasury Secretary Lawrence H. Summers is one of America’s leading economists. In addition to serving as 71st Secretary of the Treasury in the Clinton Administration, Dr. Summers served as Director of the White House National Economic Council in the Obama Administration, as President of Harvard University, and as the Chief Economist of the World Bank.
Dr. Summers’ tenure at the U.S. Treasury
coincided with the longest period of sustained economic growth in U.S.
history. He is the only Treasury Secretary in the last half century to have
left office with the national budget in surplus. Dr. Summers has
played a key role in addressing the major financial crisis for the last three
decades.
During the 1990s, he was a leader in
crafting the U.S. response to international financial crises arising in Mexico,
Brazil, Russia, Japan, and Asian emerging markets. As one of President Obama’s
chief economic advisors, Dr. Summers’ thinking helped shape the U.S.
response to the 2008 financial crisis, to the failure of the automobile
industry, and to the pressures on the European monetary system. Upon
Summers’ departure from the White House, President Obama said, “I will
always be grateful that at a time of great peril for our country, a man of
Larry’s brilliance, experience and judgment was willing to answer the call and
lead our economic team.” The Economist recognized his influence when it
defined the “Summers Doctrine,” an approach to economic policy during
financial crises that fuses a microeconomic “laissez faire” mentality
with macroeconomic activism. “Markets should allocate capital, labour and
ideas without interference, but sometimes markets go haywire, and must be
counteracted forcefully by government.”
Summers’ five years as President of Harvard
represented a time of major innovation for the University. He focused on
equality of opportunity and removing all financial obligation from students
with family incomes below $60,000 a year. He launched a major effort to
make Boston, and Cambridge in particular, the global leader in life
sciences research, with the formation of major programs for stem cell research
and genomics. Perhaps most importantly, he led efforts to renew Harvard
College with dramatic increases in study abroad programs, faculty-student
contact, and collaboration across the University during his tenure.
Currently, Dr. Summers is the President
Emeritus and the Charles W. Eliot University Professor at
Harvard University, where he became a full professor at age 28, one of the
youngest in Harvard’s recent history. He directs the University’s Mossavar-Rahmani
Center for Business and Government. Summers was the first social scientist
to receive the National Science Foundation’s Alan Waterman Award for
scientific achievement and, in 1993, he was awarded the John Bates Clark
Medal, given to the most outstanding economist under 40 in the United
States. He was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2002. He has
published more than 150 papers in scholarly journals.
Summers chairs the board of the Center for
Global Development and serves as vice chair of the Peterson Institute for
International Economics and as a board member or advisory board member to a
number of other non-profits and public policy organizations. He is a
contributor to Bloomberg’s Wall Street Week and a contributing columnist to The
Washington Post. He is an advisor to businesses and investors and serves on the
board of Doma, OpenAI and SkillSoft Corporation. He also consults with or
advises a range of companies in the finance and technology sector, including D.
E. Shaw & Co and Citi.
He has co-chaired major international
panels ranging from the G20 Independent Expert Group on Strengthening MDBs to
the G20 High Level Independent Panel on Pandemic Preparedness to the Council on
Foreign Relations study group on the Transatlantic Relationship and the Center
for American Progress’ Commission on Inclusive Prosperity. He launched a Task
Force on Fiscal Policy with Mayor Bloomberg and chaired the Commission on
Global Health, lauded by the UN Secretary General who noted that it “will bring
more than health – it will bring equity, and contribute to a life of dignity
for all.”
President Bill Clinton said that Larry
Summers “has the rare ability to see the world that is taking shape
and the skill to help to bring it into being.” He has been recognized as
one of the world’s most influential thinkers by Time, Foreign Policy,
Prospect and The Economist magazines among many others. In his speeches,
television appearances, newspaper columns and public commentary, he continues
to move forward the debate on national and global economic policy.
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