| Edward
D. Berkowitz is Chair of the Department of History
and Professor of History at George Washington University.
He has been a member of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
Faculty in Health Care Finance at the Johns Hopkins
Medical Institutions, and he was a member of the Senior
Staff of the President's Commission for a National Agenda
for the Eighties. Berkowitz has written numerous articles
and several books on Social Security, including Mr.
Social Security: The Life of Wilbur J. Cohen; America's
Welfare State: From Roosevelt to Reagan; and Social
Security and Medicare: A Policy Primer (with Eric Kingson).
He earned his B.A. in history from Princeton and his
Ph.D. in history from Northwestern.
Henning Bohn is Professor
of Economics at the University of California at Santa
Barbara. He has taught at the Wharton School of the
University of Pennsylvania and at Stanford Business
School. Among his recent articles are "U.S. Equity
Investments in Foreign Markets: Portfolio Rebalancing
or Return Chasing?" (with Linda Tesar) inThe
American Economic Review and "Balanced Budget Rules
and Public Deficits: Evidence from the U.S. States"
in the Carnegie-Rochester Conference Series on Public
Policy. Bohn studied economics at the University of
Mannheim, West Germany, and then received master's degrees
in statistics and in economics and a Ph.D. in economics,
all from Stanford University.
Barry P. Bosworth has been
a Senior Fellow in the Economic Studies Program at the
Brookings Institution since 1979. His research has focused
on issues of capital formation and saving behavior.
Bosworth has published extensively, including the recent
books Prospects for Saving and Investment in Industrial
Countries and Can America Afford to Grow Old? (with
H. Aaron and Gary Burtless). He has taught at the University
of California at Berkeley and at Harvard University.
He was Director of the President's Council on Wage and
Price Stability from 1977 to 1979, and he also served
as a Staff Economist with the President's Council of
Economic Advisers. Bosworth received his B.A. and Ph.D.
in economics from the University of Michigan.
Lynn E. Browne is Senior
Vice President and Director of Research at the Federal
Reserve Bank of Boston. Her primary responsibilities
are supporting the President of the Boston Fed in her
participation in monetary policy deliberations and overseeing
the Bank's scholarly research. Browne's own research
in recent years has included studies on the role of
services in the New England economy, discrimination
in mortgage lending, and trends in saving and investment.
Browne received her B.A. in economics from the University
of Western Ontario and her Ph.D. in economics from M.I.T.
Gary Burtless is a Senior
Fellow in the Economic Studies Program at the Brookings
Institution. He does research on issues of public finance,
saving, labor markets, income distribution, social insurance,
and government tax and transfer policy. He is the coauthor
of numerous books, including Growth with Equity: Economic
Policymaking for the Next Century. Burtless has consulted
extensively on reforming social security policy and
was a member of the Technical Panel on Trends and Issues
in Retirement Savings for the 1994-1996 Advisory Council
on Social Security. He now serves on the Panel on Privatization
of Social Security of the National Academy of Social
Insurance. Burtless graduated from Yale and earned his
Ph.D. in economics from M.I.T.
Agustin G. Carstens is Director
General of the Department of Economic Research at the
Banco de Mexico. He has been affiliated with the Banco
de Mexico for most of his professional career, serving
from 1989 to 1993 as Treasurer in charge of the open-market
operations unit, the foreign exchange division, and
the management of international reserves. He has published
a number of articles on privatization, foreign exchange
markets, and other macroeconomic issues in Latin America.
These include the recent "One Year of Solitude:
Some Pilgrim's Tales about Mexico's 1994-1995 Crisis"
in The American Economic Review. Carstens earned his
B.A. from the Instituto Tecnologico de Mexico and his
Ph.D. in economics from the University of Chicago.
Marshall N. Carter is Chairman
of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of the State
Street Corporation. He is a member of the Board of Directors
of Euroclear in Brussels and Co-Chairman of the U.S.
Working Group of Thirty, which develops recommendations
for revamping world securities clearance and settlement
processes. Carter is a member of the Council on Foreign
Relations and the Board of Directors of the Boston Fed.
He holds a B.S. in civil engineering from the U.S. Military
Academy at West Point, an M.S. in operations research
and systems analysis from the U.S. Naval Postgraduate
School, and an M.A. from the School of Public and International
Affairs at George Washington University. Before joining
State Street, he was with Chase Manhattan Bank for 15
years.
Dora L. Costa is Assistant
Professor in the Economics Department at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. She has written numerous articles
on labor markets, pensions, health care, aging, and
economic history, and the forthcoming book The
Evolution of Retirement: An American Economic History
1880-1990. In 1994, Costa was awarded the Economic History
Association's Allen Nevins Prize for outstanding dissertation
research in U.S. economic history. Costa was Coordinator
of Data Analysis for the Center for Population Economics
at the University of Chicago from 1989 to 1993. She
earned her B.A. in economics and mathematics from the
University of California at Berkeley and her Ph.D. in
economics from the University of Chicago.
Theresa J. Devine is a Principal
Analyst at the Congressional Budget Office in Washington,
D.C., where she is preparing a study assessing the potential
effect of proposed reforms of Social Security on women,
given the current situation of older women and the labor
market activity of prime-age and younger women. She
is coauthor (with Nicholas M. Kiefer) of the award-winning
book Empirical Labor Economics: The Search Approach.
She has taught at the University of Chicago, the University
of Michigan, and the University of Pennsylvania, and
in 1995-1996 was a Visiting Scholar at the American
Bar Foundation. Devine earned a B.A. in English and
economics from Boston College, an M.A. in economics
from Indiana University, and a Ph.D. in economics from
Cornell University.
Peter A. Diamond is the Paul
A. Samuelson Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. His most recent articles on
social insurance include "Proposals to Restructure
Social Security" in the Journal of Economic
Perspectives and "Generational Accounts and Generational
Balance: An Assessment" in the National Tax Journal.
Currently, Diamond is Chair of the Board of the National
Academy of Social Insurance, of which he is also a founding
member, and Co-Chair of the Academy's Panel on Privatization
of Social Security. He is a Fellow of the American Academy
of Arts and Sciences and of the Econometric Society,
and a Member of the National Academy of Sciences. Diamond
received his B.A. in mathematics from Yale and his Ph.D.
in economics from M.I.T.
Richard Disney is Professor
of Economics at Queen Mary & Westfield College at
the University of London. Previously, he was Professor
of Economics at the University of Kent at Canterbury.
Disney has written numerous academic articles and two
books on social security, pensions, and labor market
issues. He has served as a consultant to the World Bank,
the OECD, and the U.K. Treasury and Department of Social
Security on projects concerning retirement saving, pension
reform, and the consequences of employment restructuring
for pension scheme viability. Disney is currently a
Research Fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies
in London. He was educated at the Universities of Cambridge
and Sussex.
Malcolm L. Edey is Head of
the Economic Analysis Department at the Reserve Bank
of Australia. His recent articles include "An Assessment
of Financial Reform in OECD Countries" (with K.
Hviding) and "Australia's Retirement Income System:
Implications for Saving and Capital Markets" (with
J. Simon). Edey has spent most of his career at the
Reserve Bank, with three years at the Money and Finance
Division of the OECD in Paris. He is the editor of The
Future of the Financial System, the Bank's 1996 annual
conference volume, and has been a Guest Lecturer at
the University of Sydney. Edey received his B.Ec. from
the University of Sydney and his M.Sc. and Ph.D. from
the London School of Economics.
Eric M. Engen is a Senior
Economist in the Fiscal Analysis Section at the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Before joining
the Board staff, he was an assistant professor in the
Department of Economics at the University of California
at Los Angeles. Engen received the National Tax Association's
Doctoral Dissertation Award in Government Finance and
Taxation in 1992. His most recent articles are "Fundamental
Tax Reform: The Importance of Uncertainty" (with
William Gale) in The American Economic Review,
and "The Illusory Effects of Saving Incentives
on Saving" (with William Gale and John Karl Scholz)
in theJournal of Economic Perspectives. He received
his B.S. in natural resource economics from the University
of Maryland at College Park and his Ph.D. in economics
from the University of Virginia.
William Gale is a Senior
Fellow and the Joseph A. Pechman Fellow in the Economic
Studies Program at the Brookings Institution. His research
focuses on tax policy, saving behavior, and pensions.
Before joining Brookings, Gale was an assistant professor
in the Department of Economics at the University of
California at Los Angeles and a senior staff economist
for the President's Council of Economic Advisers. Gale
is the coeditor (with Henry Aaron) of Economic
Effects of Fundamental Tax Reform. He has published
in a variety of academic journals as well as in the
popular press. He received his B.A. in economics from
Duke University and his Ph.D. in economics from Stanford
University. He also studied for a year at the London
School of Economics.
Edward M. Gramlich is Dean
of the School of Public Policy and Professor of Economics
and Public Policy at the University of Michigan. He
has written several books and many articles on budget
policy, income redistribution, Social Security, and
fiscal federalism. Gramlich also has extensive governmental
experience and is now working on a book about Social
Security reform. From 1994 to 1996 he was Chair of the
Advisory Council on Social Security. He was Deputy and
Acting Director of the Congressional Budget Office from
1986 to 1987, and he has also served with the Federal
Reserve Board, the Office of Economic Opportunity, and
the Brookings Institution. Gramlich was an undergraduate
at Williams College and earned his Ph.D. at Yale University.
Charles Y. Horioka is Professor
of Economics at the Institute of Social and Economic
Research at Osaka University. He has also taught at
Kyoto University and at Stanford, Harvard, and Columbia
Universities. Horioka is a Research Associate at NBER
and at the Center for Japan-U.S. Business and Economic
Studies at the Stern School of Business at New York
University. He has published numerous articles and several
books on saving in Japan, including most recently Saving
and Bequests in an Aging Society (in Japanese) with
Noriyuki Takayama and Kiyoshi Ohta, and the forthcoming
Household Saving in Japan: The Importance of Saving
for Specific Motives. He earned his B.A. in economics
and his Ph.D. in business economics from Harvard.
Estelle James is Lead Economist
in the Policy Research Department at the World Bank.
She is principal author of Averting the Old Age
Crisis: Policies to Protect the Old and Promote Growth,
the first global analysis of economic problems associated
with population aging. Before joining the World Bank
she was Professor of Economics, Chair of the Economics
Department, and Dean of Social and Behavioral Sciences
at the State University of New York at Stony Brook.
James writes on public finance and human resources topics,
including the economics of education, nonprofit organizations,
and old-age security, and she has received many fellowships
and research grants for her work. James earned her B.S.
from Cornell University and her Ph.D. in economics from
M.I.T.
Laurence J. Kotlikoff is
Professor of Economics at Boston University. He has
also taught at the University of California at Los Angeles
and Yale University, and he has served as a Senior Economist
for the President's Council of Economic Advisers. He
has been a consultant to a variety of organizations
including the International Monetary Fund, the World
Bank, and the OECD. He is the author of Generational
Accounting and What Determines Saving?
and coauthor (with David Wise) of The Wage Carrot and
the Pension Stick: Retirement Benefits and Labor Force
Participation. He has published numerous articles on
budget deficits, generational accounting, Social Security,
and saving. Kotlikoff received his B.A. in economics
from the University of Pennsylvania and his Ph.D. in
economics from Harvard University.
Charles Lieberman is Managing
Director and Chief Economist of Chase Securities, Inc.
His responsibilities include economic research, interest
rate and exchange rate forecasting, and domestic and
global market strategy for the capital markets activities
and corporate relationships of the Chase Manhattan Bank.
He sits on the Bank's Markets Committee, which is responsible
for bank funding and interest rate risk exposure. Lieberman
has also been an economist at Manufacturers Hanover,
Shearson Lehman Brothers, and Morgan Stanley and served
as head of the Monetary Analysis staff of the New York
Fed. He earned his undergraduate degree in economics
at M.I.T. and his Ph.D. in economics from the University
of Pennsylvania.
Diane J. Macunovich is Associate
Professor of Economics at Williams College, where she
specializes in demographic economics and in labor economics.
She recently participated in the work of the Advisory
Council on Social Security, serving on the Technical
Panel on Trends and Issues in Retirement Savings and
the Technical Panel on Assumptions and Methods. From
1987 through 1993, Macunovich was a Research Associate
at the Rand Corporation. Her recent study, "Social
Security and Retirees: Two Views of the Projections
An Economist's Perspective," appears in Social
Security: What Role for the Future? a publication
of the National Academy of Social Insurance. She earned
her B.Sc. from M.I.T. and her M.A. and Ph.D. in economics
from the University of Southern California.
Cathy E. Minehan is President
and Chief Executive Officer of the Federal Reserve Bank
of Boston. As one of the nation's central bankers, she
contributes to policy decisions that promote the safety
and soundness of the U.S. financial system and the health
of the nation's economy. She is an expert in payment
systems, a major Fed responsibility. She also focuses
her energies on areas of structural economic development
within New England, including community development,
public education, and training. She serves on the boards
of many civic, professional, and educational organizations,
including the Boston Private Industry Council, Jobs
for Massachusetts, United Way, the University of Rochester,
and Bentley College. Minehan began her career with the
Federal Reserve System following graduation from the
University of Rochester. She received an M.B.A. from
New York University and holds several honorary degrees.
Alicia H. Munnell is a Member
of the President's Council of Economic Advisers. Prior
to joining the Council, she served for nearly three
years as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for Economic
Policy. Munnell has spent most of her professional career
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. She joined its
Research Department as an economist in 1973 and became
Senior Vice President and Director of Research in 1984.
She has written extensively on tax policy, Social Security,
public and private pensions, and productivity. She is
a cofounder and was the first President of the National
Academy of Social Insurance. Munnell earned her B.A.
from Wellesley College, her M.A. from Boston University,
and her Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University.
James M. Poterba is the Mitsui
Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology. He is Director of the Public Economics
Research Program at NBER and a Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Econometric Society.
Poterba's recent work has emphasized the effect of taxation
on the financial behavior of households and firms and
the impact of tax-deferred retirement saving on other
aspects of private saving. He has edited two books comparing
saving behavior in industrial nations, Public Policies
and Household Saving and International Comparisons of
Household Saving. Poterba was an undergraduate at Harvard
College and received his D.Phil. in economics from Oxford
University, where he was a Marshall Scholar.
John P. Rust is Professor
of Economics at Yale University. He has also been Professor
of Economics at the University of Wisconsin, as well
as Visiting Professor at the University of Oslo and
Visiting Lecturer at the Tinbergen Institute in Rotterdam
and the University of Western Ontario. Rust is a member
of the Panel on Retirement Income for the Committee
on National Statistics of the National Academy of Sciences.
He has published two books and numerous articles, including
"How Social Security and Medicare Affect Retirement
Behavior in a World with Incomplete Markets" (with
Chris Phelan), forthcoming in Econometrica. He received
his B.A. in mathematics from the University of Pennsylvania
and his Ph.D. in economics from M.I.T.
Andrew A. Samwick is Assistant
Professor in the Department of Economics at Dartmouth
College. Samwick is the Principal Investigator for a
research grant from the National Institute on Aging
of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
for a study on "The Effects of Pensions and Social
Security on Retirement and Saving." He is also
the author of several articles on Social Security and
on saving, including "The Transition Path in Privatizing
Social Security" (with Martin Feldstein), forthcoming
in Martin Feldstein, ed., Privatizing Social Security,
and "The Nature of Precautionary Wealth" (with
Christopher Carroll), forthcoming in the Journal of
Monetary Economics. Samwick earned his B.A. in economics
from Harvard College and his Ph.D. from M.I.T.
Steven A. Sass is an Editor
and Economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston.
His most recent book, The Promise of Private Pensions,
is forthcoming this year from Harvard University Press.
Sass has written numerous articles in the Bank's quarterly,
The Regional Review, of which he is the editor. These
have included "Public Pensions Dos and Don'ts,""Passing
the Buck: The Intergenerational Transmission of Wealth,"
and "Risk at the PBGC: The Public Guarantee of
Private Pension Benefits." Sass has taught at Rutgers
University and Bentley College, and from 1979 to 1982
he was an Assistant Research Professor at the Wharton
School and a Research Associate of the Pension Research
Council. He earned his B.A. from the University of Delaware
and his Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins University.
C. Eugene Steuerle is Senior
Fellow at the Urban Institute and author of a weekly
column "Economic Perspective" for Tax Notes
magazine. At the Institute, he has conducted extensive
research on budget and tax policy, social security,
health care, and welfare reform. His most recent book,
Retooling Social Security for the Twenty-First Century,
was written with Jon Bakija. Steuerle was Deputy Assistant
Secretary of the U.S. Treasury for Tax Analysis and
Economic Coordinator of the Treasury's 1984-86 tax reform
effort. He served as a member of the Technical Panel
on Assumptions and Methods for the Social Security Advisory
Council and advisor to the National Commission on Retirement
Policy. Steuerle was an undergraduate at the University
of Dayton and received master's degrees and his Ph.D.
from the University of Wisconsin.
Robert K. Triest is an Economist
at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. He has taught
at Johns Hopkins University and at the University of
California at Davis, where he was an Associate Professor.
His research has focused primarily on public finance
and labor economics. Recent publications include "Fundamental
Tax Reform and Labor Supply" in the book Economic
Effects of Fundamental Tax Reform; "Technology
Diffusion in U.S. Manufacturing: The Geographic Dimension"
(with Jane S. Little) in Technology and Growth,
Conference Series No. 40 of the Boston Fed; and "Regional
Differences in Family Poverty," in theNew
England Economic Review. Triest received his B.A. from
Vassar College and his Ph.D. from the University of
Wisconsin at Madison.
Mark J. Warshawsky is Manager
of Pension and Economic Research for TIAA-CREF, the
pension system for workers in U.S. institutions of higher
education, where he conducts research on the economic
and public policy environments for pension and insurance
products. He also manages TIAA-CREF's small grant and
Paul A. Samuelson Award programs. Prior to joining TIAA-CREF
in 1995, he supervised a study of underfunded defined
benefit plans for the Employee Plans Division of the
Internal Revenue Service and was a Senior Economist
in the Capital Markets Section of the Division of Research
and Statistics at the Federal Reserve Board. Warshawsky
earned his B.A. from Northwestern University and his
Ph.D. from Harvard University.
Stephen P. Zeldes is the
Benjamin Rosen Professor of Economics and Finance at
Columbia University's Graduate School of Business. Prior
to this, he was a professor in the Finance Department
at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.
Zeldes served as a member of the Technical Panel on
Trends and Issues in Retirement Saving of the Advisory
Council on Social Security, and he is a member of the
National Academy of Social Insurance Panel on Social
Security Privatization. His research has examined a
wide range of applied macroeconomic issues including
the determinants of household saving and portfolio choice,
the effects of government budget deficits, and the relationship
between consumer spending and the stock market. Zeldes
did his undergraduate work at Brown University and received
his Ph.D. from M.I.T. |