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The Role of the Fed in Calm
or Crisis
July 21, 2006
Centenary College
Shreveport, Louisiana
Sponsored by
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, New Orleans
Branch
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Louisiana Council on Economic Education
Centenary College of Louisiana |
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Addressing the financial needs
of individuals, communities and businesses after a natural
disaster is a huge undertaking. When Hurricanes Katrina
and Rita struck the Gulf Coast in 2005, the widespread
destruction tested the operations of the Federal Reserve
System and, in particular, those of the Atlanta Fed.
This one-day conference addresses
the Federal Reserve’s role in the U.S. payments
system and focuses on the Fed’s efforts through
its cash and check operations to ameliorate the chaos
brought about by this disaster.
In addition to discussions on
the economic effects of natural disasters and the Fed’s
role in crises, teachers will be given classroom ideas
for economics and personal finance education.
Agenda, July
21, 2006
| 8:00 a.m. |
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Continental Breakfast |
| 8:20 a.m. |
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Welcome |
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Harold Christensen
Director, Center for Economic Education
Centenary College of Louisiana |
| 8:30 a.m. |
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Federal Reserve System: Our Central Bank at Work |
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Claire Loup
Economic and Financial Education Specialist
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta,
New Orleans Branch |
| 9:15 a.m. |
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Paper Not Plastic! Katrina Confirms Cash Is King |
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Claire Loup |
| 10:30 a.m. |
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Hurricane Katrina: Economic Effects |
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Michael J. Chriszt
Director of International and Regional Analysis
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta |
| 11:15 a.m. |
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The Certain Teaching of Economic Uncertainty |
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Harold Christensen |
| Noon |
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Lunch |
| 12:45 p.m. |
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Preparing for a Rainy Day |
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Sherry Kiser
Director of Economic Education
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
| 1:30 p.m. |
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Virtual Economics |
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Sheri Lazare
President
Louisiana Council for Economic Education |
| 3:30 p.m. |
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Adjourn |
Speakers
Harold R. Christensen
Professor of Economics and Director,
Center for Economic Education
Centenary College of Louisiana
Christensen joined the Centenary
faculty in 1980 after having taught at the University
of Central Oklahoma. His primary teaching responsibilities
are in macroeconomic theory, money and banking, and
industrial organization. Christensen’s research
interests are economic history of railroads and energy
economics. He has published in the Journal of Economics,
Southwestern Economic Review, Atlantic Economic Journal
and The Social Science Journal. He also contributed
to An Encyclopedia of Keynesian Economics. Christensen
holds a B.A. in philosophy and M.S. and Ed.D. degrees
in economics education from Oklahoma State University.
He was a postdoctoral fellow in applied economics at
the University of Chicago.
Michael J. Chriszt
Director of International and Regional Analysis
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta
Chriszt’s duties at
the Atlanta Fed include research and analysis of international
economic and political developments and economic conditions
in the Sixth District. He has been with the Bank since
1989 and in his current position for three years. He
is a board member of the University System of Georgia’s
European Union Center and the Atlanta Council for International
Relations. Chriszt earned a master’s degree in
political science with emphasis on international economics
and comparative politics from Miami University. He also
holds a certificate of study in the European Union and
bachelor’s degrees in diplomacy and foreign affairs
and history. He is a graduate of executive education
programs at Duke University’s Fuqua School of
Business and the University of Virginia’s Darden
Graduate School of Business Administration.
Sherry Kiser
Director of Economic Education
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Kiser is charged with developing
and implementing economic education initiatives for
the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. Before assuming
her current position in the Public Affairs Department,
she worked in the Bank’s Research Department.
Her responsibilities included analyzing international
economic and political conditions, particularly in Latin
America, as well as organizing international visits
and conferences sponsored by the Center for Latin American
Economics. Kiser has taught at the secondary, junior
college and university levels. She has also been a social
studies curriculum writer and secondary social studies
instructional facilitator for the Dallas Independent
School District. Kiser received a B.A. in Spanish and
history from the University of Texas at Austin and an
M.L.A. from Southern Methodist University.
Sheri Lazare
President
Louisiana Council for Economic Education
In addition to her leadership
role at the Louisiana Council for Economic Education,
Lazare is the lead faculty member for the University
of Phoenix and former director of advancement research
at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. She previously
worked in the nonprofit legal industry with the Lafayette
Volunteer Lawyers and Lafayette Parish Bar Foundation
and in the charity hospital industry. Lazare is president
of the Association of Professional Researchers for Advancement–Southwest
and the 2002 recipient of APRA’s Researcher of
the Year award. In 2006–07, she will serve as
vice president of education for the Association of Fundraising
Professionals, Baton Rouge chapter. Lazare has undergraduate
degrees in English, history and criminal justice from
the University of Southwestern Louisiana and a master’s
in English and rhetoric from the University of Louisiana.
Claire Loup
Economic and Financial Education Specialist
Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta,
New Orleans Branch
Loup has nearly 20 years
of teaching experience in the secondary, postsecondary
and corporate arenas. At the Federal Reserve Bank of
Atlanta, she supports strategies to promote economic
and financial literacy education efforts in the New
Orleans Branch zone and throughout the district. She
has visited hundreds of schools, educating teachers
and students (grades K–12 and college) on the
critical personal finance topics of money management,
banking, and credit and credit card management. In addition,
she has conducted professional development workshops
in conjunction with other Federal Reserve offices, the
Louisiana and Mississippi Councils on Economic Education
and Louisiana Council for the Social Studies, as well
as the Louisiana JumpStart Coalition with the Louisiana
State University AgCenter. Loup is a business education
graduate of the University of New Orleans.
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