- Edward Gramlich
Edward M. Gramlich (
July 18 1939 –September 5 2007 ) was a professor ofeconomics at theUniversity of Michigan and a former member of theBoard of Governors of the Federal Reserve .Gramlich graduated from
Williams College in 1961 and received a master's degree in 1962 and aPh.D. ineconomics in 1965 fromYale University . He joined theFederal Reserve as a research economist from 1965-1970, and was a seniorfellow at theBrookings Institution from 1973-1976. He then taught economics and public policy at theUniversity of Michigan from 1976 to 1997, including a term as dean of theGerald R. Ford School of Public Policy , and returned to Michigan as a professor in 2005.He was appointed to the
Federal Reserve System by PresidentBill Clinton in 1997 and resigned in August 2005. For much of his term, he was the Chair of the Board's Committee on Consumer and Community Affairs.He was also the chairman of the
Air Transportation Stabilization Board , which was created by Congress after the 9/11 attacks raised concerns about the survival of the U.S. airline industry. Gramlich had also chaired several other lesser-known stabilization boards created by Congress. In an April 2003 speech to the National Economists Club, he concluded that such boards are an ineffective way to help struggling industries because of the time it takes before help arrives and because the industries that are in need of help often have far deeper problems that the stabilization boards cannot fix.“If Congress wants to bail out an industry in a hurry, it should bail it out. It takes time to act in this program, which means it’s probably not a good program for [emergency] scenarios”, Gramlich told the club.
Gramlich was also formerly the chairman of the
Neighborhood Reinvestment Corporation and was seen as an expert onsubprime lending after his years as a banking regulator at the Federal Reserve.Gramlich had other government experience as well, serving as chairman of the Quadrennial Advisory Council on Social Security from 1994 to 1996 and as deputy director, and then acting director, of the Congressional Budget Office in 1986-1987. He also conducted research in 1992 on the economics of major league baseball and wrote a popular textbook on benefit-cost analysis that is in its second edition.
Gramlich and his wife, Ruth had two children, Sarah and Robert, both married, and three grandchildren.
Edward Gramlich died, aged 68, from
leukemia .External links
* [http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/18/business/18gramlich.html?ex=1189051200&en=dc0ccb39a6376b8c&ei=5070 August 2007 New York Times Article regarding Mr. Gramlich]
* [http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/press/other/2005/200505182/ Press release concerning Gramlich's resignation from the Federal Reserve]
* [http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118134111823129555.html?mod=todays_us_money_and_investing June 9, 2007 WSJ article about Gramlich's efforts to get Greenspan to crack down on predatory lending]
* [http://www.urban.org/expert.cfm?ID=EdwardGramlich List of postings by Edward Gramlich on the Urban Institute website for "nonpartisan economic and social policy research"]
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