Richard Alm
Economics Writer
Before joining the
Dallas Fed in 2003, Alm worked for 24 years as
a reporter, editor and columnist at the Dallas
Morning News, U.S. News & World Report, Arizona
Republic, and Kansas City Star and Times.
Since 1992, he and W. Michael Cox, Dallas Fed
senior vice president and chief economist, have
written a series of 12 annual report essays that
focus on how America’s free enterprise system
generates economic progress. They also collaborated
on a 1999 book, Myths of Rich & Poor:
Why We’re Better Off Than We Think.
Alm graduated from Florida State University and
earned a master’s degree in journalism from
the University of Kansas.
Stephen P. A. Brown
Director of Energy Economics and Microeconomic
Policy Analysis
Brown joined the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas in 1981, after working
as an energy economist for Brookhaven National
Laboratory and teaching economics at several universities.
He is currently an adjunct professor of economics
at Southern Methodist University and Tulane University.
Brown has authored numerous articles appearing
in such publications as Economic Inquiry,
Review of Regional Studies, Quarterly Review of
Economics and Finance and The Energy
Journal. Brown holds a B.S. in economics
from California Polytechnic State University and
an M.A. and a Ph.D. in economics from the University
of Maryland.
Steve Cobb
Chairman, Department of Economics,
University of North Texas
Cobb currently serves
as director of the Center for Economic Education
and is completing his ninth year as the Economics
Department chair at the University of North Texas.
Cobb has been involved in the National Council
on Economic Education’s Economics International
Training of Trainers program for the past 10 years,
helping more than 500 faculty members in the newly
independent states of the former Soviet Union
teach economics from a market perspective. He
also served as president of the National Association
of Economic Educators in 2000. Cobb received his
Ph.D. in economics from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Bryce Eakin
Student
Rice University
Eakin is a recent graduate
of the High School for the Performing and Visual
Arts in Houston. He is a two-year participant
in the Fed Challenge economics competition, co-captaining
a team that ranked in the top four in the nation.
He has recently been accepted by Rice University,
where he intends to study economics, political
science and macroeconometric modeling.
Robert L. Formaini
Senior Economist and Public Policy Advisor
Formaini is a past
conference director and vice president of public
policy for the CATO Institute and founder of the
Cato Journal. He is cofounder of the National
Center for Policy Analysis in Dallas and was its
first executive director. He was chair of the
McCamish Business School at Reinhardt College
and the first director of the Center for Entrepreneurship
and Free Enterprise. He is currently an adjunct
economics professor in the School of Management
at the University of Texas at Dallas. Formaini
has a B.F.A. in music from Ithaca College, an
M.A. from Virginia Commonwealth University and
a Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Dallas.
Evan F. Koenig
Vice President and Senior Economist
Koenig joined the Dallas
Fed in 1988 after teaching at the University of
Washington. He oversees macroeconomic research
and analysis in the Dallas Fed's Research Department,
briefs the president and Bank directors on national
economic conditions, and writes articles for Bank
publications and scholarly journals. In his research,
Koenig seeks to predict and explain movements
in prices, output and employment, particularly
as these movements are affected by monetary policy.
His articles have appeared in such publications
as The Quarterly Journal of Economics, The
Review of Economics and Statistics, The Journal
of Public Economics and the Dallas Fed’s
Economic and Financial Policy Review.
He is an adjunct professor in the Economics Department
at Southern Methodist University. Koenig holds
bachelor's degrees in mathematics and economics
from the University of Wisconsin and a Ph.D. in
economics from Harvard University.
Kenneth J. Robinson
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor,
Financial Industry Studies
Robinson has been with
the Dallas Fed since 1986, specializing in macroeconomics
as well as money and banking. His current research
focuses on how financial structure, monetary policy
and economic activity affect U.S. financial markets.
He has published articles in several academic
journals, including the Journal of International
Money and Finance, Journal of Financial Services
Research and Journal of Macroeconomics.
Robinson holds a B.S. from the University of New
Orleans, an M.S. from Louisiana State University
and a Ph.D. from Ohio State University.
Harvey Rosenblum
Senior Vice President and Director of Research
Rosenblum is an economic
policy advisor to the president of the Dallas
Fed and an associate economist for the Federal
Open Market Committee. His current research interests
center on monetary policy, electronic money, Social
Security reform, international trade and dollarization
in Latin America. Rosenblum, who is immediate
past president of the National Association for
Business Economics, has written for such publications
as the Journal of Finance, New York Times
and The Handbook for Banking Strategy.
He is a visiting professor of finance at Southern
Methodist University. Rosenblum received a B.A.
in economics from the University of Connecticut
and a Ph.D. in economics from the University of
California at Santa Barbara.
Thomas F. Siems
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor
Siems began his career
with the Federal Reserve in 1984. He is also a
senior lecturer with the Engineering Management,
Information and Systems Department in the School
of Engineering at Southern Methodist University
and an advisory board member of the Cato Institute’s
Project on Social Security Choice. Siems has published
more than 45 articles in such journals as the
Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, European
Journal of Political Economy and Review
of Financial Economics. Siems is a graduate
of the Public Finance Institute at the University
of Michigan and an alumnus of the Graduate School
of Banking at Colorado. He earned a B.S.E. from
the University of Michigan and an M.S. and a Ph.D.
in operations research from Southern Methodist
University.
Alan D. Viard
Research Officer and Senior Economist
Viard conducts research
in public finance and macroeconomics at the Dallas
Fed. He served as a senior economist at the Council
of Economic Advisers during a leave of absence
in 2003–04. Before joining the Dallas Fed
in 1998, Viard was an assistant professor of economics
at Ohio State University. He was also a staff
economist at the Joint Committee on Taxation of
the U.S. Congress in 1992–93 and a visiting
foreign scholar at Osaka University in Japan in
1995. He has authored more than a dozen articles
in professional journals and Federal Reserve publications.
Viard received a B.A. in economics from Yale University
and a Ph.D. in economics from Harvard University.
Mark A. Wynne
Vice President and Senior Economist
Wynne’s primary
research interests are in the fields of monetary
economics and macroeconomics, and he has published
in many leading professional journals. He has
taught at the University of Rochester and Southern
Methodist University and is an academic board
member of the Open Republic Institute in Dublin.
During 1997–98 Wynne worked on issues related
to monetary policy strategy under economic and
monetary union for the European Monetary Institute
and, later, the European Central Bank. Wynne holds
B.A. and M.A. degrees from the National University
of Ireland (University College, Dublin) and an
M.A. and a Ph.D. from the University of Rochester.
Mine K. Yücel
Vice President and Senior Economist
Yücel is head
of the regional economics group at the Dallas
Fed and an advisor to the Bank’s president
on regional and energy issues. Her main research
interests are analyzing the effects of energy
price shocks, energy markets, regional growth
and growth effects of fiscal policy. Yücel
is president of the United States Association
of Energy Economics (USAEE) and the Dallas chapter
of the National Association for Business Economics.
She has served on the executive boards of the
USAEE and the Dallas chapter of Women in Technology
International. Before joining the Bank, she was
an assistant professor of economics at Louisiana
State University. She has a B.S. and M.S. in mathematics
from Bogazici University in Istanbul, Turkey,
and a Ph.D. in economics from Rice University. |