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Lisa D. Cook

Lisa DeNell Cook is an American economist who has served as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors since May 23, 2022. She is the first African American woman and first woman of color to sit on the Board. Before her appointment to the Federal Reserve, she was elected to the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago.[1]

Lisa Cook
Member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors
Assumed office
May 23, 2022
Nominated byJoe Biden
Preceded byJanet Yellen
Personal details
Born1964 (age 59–60)
EducationSpelman College (BA)
St Hilda's College, Oxford (BA)
Cheikh Anta Diop University (MA)
University of California, Berkeley (PhD)
WebsiteOfficial website
Academic career
InstitutionMichigan State University
FieldMacroeconomics
Economic history
Doctoral
advisor
Barry Eichengreen
David Romer
AwardsTruman Scholar (1984)
Marshall Scholar (1986)

Cook was previously a professor of economics and international relations at Michigan State University and a member of the American Economic Association's Executive Committee.[2] An authority on international economics, especially the Russian economy, she has been involved in advising policymakers from the Obama Administration to the Nigerian and Rwandan governments. Her research is at the intersection of macroeconomics and economic history, with recent work in African-American history and innovation economics.[3][4] Cook is regarded as one of the few prominent black female economists and has attracted attention within academia for her efforts in mentoring black women and advocating for their inclusion in the field of economics.[5]

On January 14, 2022, President Joe Biden nominated Cook to serve as Federal Reserve governor;[6] she was confirmed by the U.S. Senate on May 10, and took office on May 23, 2022.[7]

Early life and education edit

Cook, born 1964,[8] is one of three daughters of Baptist hospital chaplain Payton B. Cook and Georgia College professor of nursing Mary Murray Cook, and was raised in Milledgeville, Georgia.[9] As a child, she was involved in desegregating schools in Georgia, and still has physical scars from being attacked by segregationists when she enrolled in a formerly White school.[10] She is a cousin of chemist Percy Julian.[10]

She read for a BA in Physics and Philosophy (magna cum laude) from Spelman College in 1986, where she was named a Harry S. Truman Scholar. She proceeded to St Hilda's College, Oxford as Spelman's first Marshall Scholar where she earned another BA in Philosophy, Politics, and Economics in 1988. She took courses towards a Master's Degree in Philosophy at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Senegal. After a mountain climbing trip on Mount Kilimanjaro with an economist, Cook began to seriously consider pursuing a PhD in Economics.[11][3] She temporarily used a wheelchair due to an automobile accident, when she entered graduate school.[9] Cook earned a PhD in Economics from the University of California, Berkeley in 1997 under the guidance of Barry Eichengreen and David Romer.[12] Her dissertation focused on the underdevelopment of the banking system in czarist and post-Soviet Russia.[9][12]

Career edit

Cook was a visiting assistant professor at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and Harvard Business School from 1997 to 2002, where she was Deputy Director of Africa Research at Harvard's Center for International Development. From 2000 to 2001, she was a senior adviser on finance and development at the U.S. Treasury Department as a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow. She was a National Fellow and Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University from 2002 to 2005. Cook advised the Nigerian government on its banking reforms in 2005, and the government of Rwanda on economic development.[3] In 2005, Cook joined Michigan State University as an assistant professor, becoming a tenured associate professor in 2013. She served as a Senior Economist in the Obama Administration's Council of Economic Advisers from August 2011 to August 2012.[4]

Early in her career, Cook's research focused on international economics, particularly the Russian economy. Later she has broadened her research on economic growth to focus on the economic history of African-Americans.[3] Her research suggested that violence against African-Americans under the Jim Crow laws led to a lower than expected number of actual patents filed.[13][10] Together with other economists, she has collated a long-running database on lynching in the United States.[14]

Since 2016, she has directed the American Economic Association's Summer Program for underrepresented minority students.[15] She became a member of the American Economic Association's Executive Committee in 2019.[2]

In November 2020, Cook was named a volunteer member of the Joe Biden presidential transition Agency Review Team to support transition efforts related to the Federal Reserve.[16]

Federal Reserve nomination edit

 
Cook sworn in as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors by Jerome Powell in May 2022

In 2021, Senator Sherrod Brown reportedly pushed the Biden Administration to nominate Cook to serve on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.[17] President Biden officially nominated Cook to be a member of the Board of Governors on January 14, 2022.[18] She is the first Black woman on the Federal Reserve's board.[19]

Hearings were held on Cook's nomination before the Senate Banking Committee on February 3, 2022. On March 16, 2022, the committee deadlocked on Cook's nomination in a party-line vote, forcing the entire Senate to move to discharge her nomination out of the committee.[20][21] On March 29, 2022, the United States Senate discharged her nomination from the Senate Banking Committee by a 50-49 vote.[22] On April 26, 2022 the Senate attempted to invoke cloture on her nomination, but it was not agreed to by a 47-51 vote because Senators Chris Murphy and Ron Wyden contracted COVID-19 and were unable to vote. No Senate Republican voted for her, characterizing her as unqualified and a left-wing extremist.[23][19] On May 10, 2022, the Senate confirmed her nomination by a 51-50 vote, with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tiebreaking vote, after cloture was invoked on her nomination by a 50-49 vote.[24]

In May 2023, Biden nominated Cook for a full 14-year term.[25] Her nomination was confirmed by the Senate on September 6, 2023 by a 51–47 vote.[26]

Selected works edit

  • Cook, Lisa D. "Trade credit and bank finance: Financing small firms in Russia." Journal of Business venturing 14, no. 5-6 (1999): 493-518.
  • Cook, Lisa D. "Three essays on internal and external credit markets in post-Soviet and tsarist Russia." University of California, Berkeley, 1997.
  • Cook, Lisa D., and Jeffrey Sachs. "Regional public goods in international assistance." Kaul et al., Global public goods: international cooperation in the 21st century (1999): 436-449.
  • Beny, Laura N., and Lisa D. Cook. "Metals or management? Explaining Africa's recent economic growth performance." American Economic Review 99, no. 2 (2009): 268-74.
  • Cook, Lisa D., and Chaleampong Kongcharoen. The idea gap in pink and black. No. w16331. National Bureau of Economic Research, 2010.
  • Cook, Lisa D., Trevon D. Logan, and John M. Parman. "Distinctively black names in the American past." Explorations in Economic History 53 (2014): 64-82.
  • Cook, Lisa D. "Violence and economic activity: evidence from African American patents, 1870–1940." Journal of Economic Growth 19, no. 2 (2014): 221-257.

References edit

  1. ^ Ward, Kim (January 12, 2022). "MSU's Lisa Cook elected to Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago board". MSUToday. Michigan State University. Retrieved January 13, 2022.
  2. ^ a b "American Economic Association". www.aeaweb.org. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d Hired Pen, Inc. "Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession Profiles: Lisa D. Cook, Michigan State University". American Economic Association. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Lisa Cook". Equitable Growth. Retrieved January 16, 2020.
  5. ^ Casselman, Ben; Tankersley, Jim (June 10, 2020). "Economics, dominated by white men, is roiled by Black Lives Matter". The New York Times.
  6. ^ Franck, Thomas (January 14, 2022). "Biden to nominate Sarah Bloom Raskin as vice chair for supervision at Fed; Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson as governors". CNBC. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  7. ^ Lane, Sylvan (May 23, 2022). "Biden's Fed nominees sworn into office". The Hill. Retrieved May 23, 2022.
  8. ^ Basken, Paul (October 14, 2021). "Interview with Lisa Cook". Times Higher Education. Retrieved October 12, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c Khang, Hyun-Sung (December 2020). "The Accidental Economist: Lisa D. Cook of Michigan State University". Finance & Development. International Monetary Fund. pp. 48–51. Retrieved October 12, 2023.
  10. ^ a b c Duffin, Karen; Childs, Mary (June 12, 2020). "Patent Racism". Planet Money (Podcast). NPR. Retrieved June 13, 2020.
  11. ^ Hasenstab, Maria (February 20, 2019). "Mount Kilimanjaro and Becoming an Economics Professor". Women in Economics (Podcast). Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis. Retrieved October 12, 2023.
  12. ^ a b Cook, Lisa DeNell (1997). Three essays on internal and external credit markets in post-Soviet and Tsarist Russia (PhD dissertation). University of California, Berkeley. OCLC 931666108.
  13. ^ Cook, Lisa D. (2014). "Violence and Economic Activity: Evidence from African American Patents, 1870–1940". Journal of Economic Growth. 19 (2): 221–257. doi:10.1007/s10887-014-9102-z. S2CID 153971489.
  14. ^ Cook, Lisa D. (2012). "Converging to a National Lynching Database: Recent Developments and the Way Forward". Historical Methods: A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History. 45 (2): 55–63. doi:10.1080/01615440.2011.639289. S2CID 154428680.
  15. ^ Bhattacharya, Jhumpa (November 1, 2019). "Episode 27: Dr. Lisa D. Cook and Anna Gifty Opoku-Agyeman". Hidden Truths (Podcast). Oakland, California, USA: Insight Center for Community Economic Development. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
  16. ^ "Agency Review Teams". President-Elect Joe Biden. Retrieved November 10, 2020.
  17. ^ Franck, Thomas; Wilkie, Christina (May 21, 2021). "Key Senate Dem's choice for Fed board is an economist who would be the first Black woman to serve in that role". CNBC. Retrieved October 2, 2021.
  18. ^ White House Office of the Press Secretary (January 14, 2022). "President Biden Nominates Sarah Bloom Raskin to Serve as Vice Chair for Supervision of the Federal Reserve, and Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson to Serve as Governors" (Press release). Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  19. ^ a b Rugaber, Christopher (March 29, 2022). "Senate advances Fed nominee Lisa Cook on party-line vote". Associated Press.
  20. ^ "PN1679 — Lisa DeNell Cook — Federal Reserve System 117th Congress (2021-2022)". US Congress. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  21. ^ Lane, Sylvan (March 16, 2022). "Senate panel advances Biden Fed nominees to confirmation votes". The Hill. Retrieved March 17, 2022.
  22. ^ Roll call vote 110, via Senate.gov
  23. ^ Chasmar, Jessica (February 1, 2022). "Biden Fed nominee's old tweets show she's 'hyper-partisan,' Republicans say". Fox Business.
  24. ^ Siegel, Rachel (May 10, 2022). "Economist Lisa Cook to become first Black woman on Fed board". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved May 11, 2022.
  25. ^ White House Office of the Press Secretary (May 12, 2023). "President Biden Announces Nominees to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors" (Press release). Retrieved February 2, 2024.
  26. ^ "PN644 — Lisa DeNell Cook — Federal Reserve System 118th Congress (2023-2024)". US Congress. Retrieved February 2, 2024.

External links edit

Government offices
Preceded by Member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors
2022–present
Incumbent

lisa, cook, lisa, denell, cook, american, economist, served, member, federal, reserve, board, governors, since, 2022, first, african, american, woman, first, woman, color, board, before, appointment, federal, reserve, elected, board, directors, federal, reserv. Lisa DeNell Cook is an American economist who has served as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors since May 23 2022 She is the first African American woman and first woman of color to sit on the Board Before her appointment to the Federal Reserve she was elected to the board of directors of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago 1 Lisa CookMember of the Federal Reserve Board of GovernorsIncumbentAssumed office May 23 2022Nominated byJoe BidenPreceded byJanet YellenPersonal detailsBorn1964 age 59 60 EducationSpelman College BA St Hilda s College Oxford BA Cheikh Anta Diop University MA University of California Berkeley PhD WebsiteOfficial websiteAcademic careerInstitutionMichigan State UniversityFieldMacroeconomicsEconomic historyDoctoraladvisorBarry EichengreenDavid RomerAwardsTruman Scholar 1984 Marshall Scholar 1986 Cook was previously a professor of economics and international relations at Michigan State University and a member of the American Economic Association s Executive Committee 2 An authority on international economics especially the Russian economy she has been involved in advising policymakers from the Obama Administration to the Nigerian and Rwandan governments Her research is at the intersection of macroeconomics and economic history with recent work in African American history and innovation economics 3 4 Cook is regarded as one of the few prominent black female economists and has attracted attention within academia for her efforts in mentoring black women and advocating for their inclusion in the field of economics 5 On January 14 2022 President Joe Biden nominated Cook to serve as Federal Reserve governor 6 she was confirmed by the U S Senate on May 10 and took office on May 23 2022 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Federal Reserve nomination 3 Selected works 4 References 5 External linksEarly life and education editCook born 1964 8 is one of three daughters of Baptist hospital chaplain Payton B Cook and Georgia College professor of nursing Mary Murray Cook and was raised in Milledgeville Georgia 9 As a child she was involved in desegregating schools in Georgia and still has physical scars from being attacked by segregationists when she enrolled in a formerly White school 10 She is a cousin of chemist Percy Julian 10 She read for a BA in Physics and Philosophy magna cum laude from Spelman College in 1986 where she was named a Harry S Truman Scholar She proceeded to St Hilda s College Oxford as Spelman s first Marshall Scholar where she earned another BA in Philosophy Politics and Economics in 1988 She took courses towards a Master s Degree in Philosophy at Cheikh Anta Diop University in Senegal After a mountain climbing trip on Mount Kilimanjaro with an economist Cook began to seriously consider pursuing a PhD in Economics 11 3 She temporarily used a wheelchair due to an automobile accident when she entered graduate school 9 Cook earned a PhD in Economics from the University of California Berkeley in 1997 under the guidance of Barry Eichengreen and David Romer 12 Her dissertation focused on the underdevelopment of the banking system in czarist and post Soviet Russia 9 12 Career editCook was a visiting assistant professor at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and Harvard Business School from 1997 to 2002 where she was Deputy Director of Africa Research at Harvard s Center for International Development From 2000 to 2001 she was a senior adviser on finance and development at the U S Treasury Department as a Council on Foreign Relations International Affairs Fellow She was a National Fellow and Research Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University from 2002 to 2005 Cook advised the Nigerian government on its banking reforms in 2005 and the government of Rwanda on economic development 3 In 2005 Cook joined Michigan State University as an assistant professor becoming a tenured associate professor in 2013 She served as a Senior Economist in the Obama Administration s Council of Economic Advisers from August 2011 to August 2012 4 Early in her career Cook s research focused on international economics particularly the Russian economy Later she has broadened her research on economic growth to focus on the economic history of African Americans 3 Her research suggested that violence against African Americans under the Jim Crow laws led to a lower than expected number of actual patents filed 13 10 Together with other economists she has collated a long running database on lynching in the United States 14 Since 2016 she has directed the American Economic Association s Summer Program for underrepresented minority students 15 She became a member of the American Economic Association s Executive Committee in 2019 2 In November 2020 Cook was named a volunteer member of the Joe Biden presidential transition Agency Review Team to support transition efforts related to the Federal Reserve 16 Federal Reserve nomination edit nbsp Cook sworn in as a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors by Jerome Powell in May 2022In 2021 Senator Sherrod Brown reportedly pushed the Biden Administration to nominate Cook to serve on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors 17 President Biden officially nominated Cook to be a member of the Board of Governors on January 14 2022 18 She is the first Black woman on the Federal Reserve s board 19 Hearings were held on Cook s nomination before the Senate Banking Committee on February 3 2022 On March 16 2022 the committee deadlocked on Cook s nomination in a party line vote forcing the entire Senate to move to discharge her nomination out of the committee 20 21 On March 29 2022 the United States Senate discharged her nomination from the Senate Banking Committee by a 50 49 vote 22 On April 26 2022 the Senate attempted to invoke cloture on her nomination but it was not agreed to by a 47 51 vote because Senators Chris Murphy and Ron Wyden contracted COVID 19 and were unable to vote No Senate Republican voted for her characterizing her as unqualified and a left wing extremist 23 19 On May 10 2022 the Senate confirmed her nomination by a 51 50 vote with Vice President Kamala Harris casting the tiebreaking vote after cloture was invoked on her nomination by a 50 49 vote 24 In May 2023 Biden nominated Cook for a full 14 year term 25 Her nomination was confirmed by the Senate on September 6 2023 by a 51 47 vote 26 Selected works editCook Lisa D Trade credit and bank finance Financing small firms in Russia Journal of Business venturing 14 no 5 6 1999 493 518 Cook Lisa D Three essays on internal and external credit markets in post Soviet and tsarist Russia University of California Berkeley 1997 Cook Lisa D and Jeffrey Sachs Regional public goods in international assistance Kaul et al Global public goods international cooperation in the 21st century 1999 436 449 Beny Laura N and Lisa D Cook Metals or management Explaining Africa s recent economic growth performance American Economic Review 99 no 2 2009 268 74 Cook Lisa D and Chaleampong Kongcharoen The idea gap in pink and black No w16331 National Bureau of Economic Research 2010 Cook Lisa D Trevon D Logan and John M Parman Distinctively black names in the American past Explorations in Economic History 53 2014 64 82 Cook Lisa D Violence and economic activity evidence from African American patents 1870 1940 Journal of Economic Growth 19 no 2 2014 221 257 References edit Ward Kim January 12 2022 MSU s Lisa Cook elected to Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago board MSUToday Michigan State University Retrieved January 13 2022 a b American Economic Association www aeaweb org Retrieved January 16 2020 a b c d Hired Pen Inc Committee on the Status of Minority Groups in the Economics Profession Profiles Lisa D Cook Michigan State University American Economic Association Retrieved January 16 2020 a b Lisa Cook Equitable Growth Retrieved January 16 2020 Casselman Ben Tankersley Jim June 10 2020 Economics dominated by white men is roiled by Black Lives Matter The New York Times Franck Thomas January 14 2022 Biden to nominate Sarah Bloom Raskin as vice chair for supervision at Fed Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson as governors CNBC Retrieved January 14 2022 Lane Sylvan May 23 2022 Biden s Fed nominees sworn into office The Hill Retrieved May 23 2022 Basken Paul October 14 2021 Interview with Lisa Cook Times Higher Education Retrieved October 12 2023 a b c Khang Hyun Sung December 2020 The Accidental Economist Lisa D Cook of Michigan State University Finance amp Development International Monetary Fund pp 48 51 Retrieved October 12 2023 a b c Duffin Karen Childs Mary June 12 2020 Patent Racism Planet Money Podcast NPR Retrieved June 13 2020 Hasenstab Maria February 20 2019 Mount Kilimanjaro and Becoming an Economics Professor Women in Economics Podcast Federal Reserve Bank of St Louis Retrieved October 12 2023 a b Cook Lisa DeNell 1997 Three essays on internal and external credit markets in post Soviet and Tsarist Russia PhD dissertation University of California Berkeley OCLC 931666108 Cook Lisa D 2014 Violence and Economic Activity Evidence from African American Patents 1870 1940 Journal of Economic Growth 19 2 221 257 doi 10 1007 s10887 014 9102 z S2CID 153971489 Cook Lisa D 2012 Converging to a National Lynching Database Recent Developments and the Way Forward Historical Methods A Journal of Quantitative and Interdisciplinary History 45 2 55 63 doi 10 1080 01615440 2011 639289 S2CID 154428680 Bhattacharya Jhumpa November 1 2019 Episode 27 Dr Lisa D Cook and Anna Gifty Opoku Agyeman Hidden Truths Podcast Oakland California USA Insight Center for Community Economic Development Retrieved December 29 2019 Agency Review Teams President Elect Joe Biden Retrieved November 10 2020 Franck Thomas Wilkie Christina May 21 2021 Key Senate Dem s choice for Fed board is an economist who would be the first Black woman to serve in that role CNBC Retrieved October 2 2021 White House Office of the Press Secretary January 14 2022 President Biden Nominates Sarah Bloom Raskin to Serve as Vice Chair for Supervision of the Federal Reserve and Lisa Cook and Philip Jefferson to Serve as Governors Press release Retrieved March 17 2022 a b Rugaber Christopher March 29 2022 Senate advances Fed nominee Lisa Cook on party line vote Associated Press PN1679 Lisa DeNell Cook Federal Reserve System 117th Congress 2021 2022 US Congress Retrieved March 17 2022 Lane Sylvan March 16 2022 Senate panel advances Biden Fed nominees to confirmation votes The Hill Retrieved March 17 2022 Roll call vote 110 via Senate gov Chasmar Jessica February 1 2022 Biden Fed nominee s old tweets show she s hyper partisan Republicans say Fox Business Siegel Rachel May 10 2022 Economist Lisa Cook to become first Black woman on Fed board Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved May 11 2022 White House Office of the Press Secretary May 12 2023 President Biden Announces Nominees to the Federal Reserve Board of Governors Press release Retrieved February 2 2024 PN644 Lisa DeNell Cook Federal Reserve System 118th Congress 2023 2024 US Congress Retrieved February 2 2024 External links editAppearances on C SPAN nbsp Government officesPreceded byJanet Yellen Member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors2022 present Incumbent Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lisa D Cook amp oldid 1206992940, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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