Honoring Ned Gramlich and the Importance of Policy Research
Date & time
Location
With generous support from the Trehan Foundation.
Join in the conversation with the hashtag #fordschoolgramlich
Edward M. (Ned) Gramlich was among the most productive policy economists of his day–a day stretching from the mid-1960s until his death in 2007. In addition to producing academic (often practical) work relevant to dozens of policy issues, he was an accomplished administrator and leader. He was founding dean of the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan, and he was a member of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve.
For more information about Ned Gramlich, click here to watch a tribute from his friends and colleagues.
On the occasion of the 100th anniversary of the Ford School (which of course had a different name 100 years ago), the Ford School and Federal Reserve Bank host "Honoring Ned Gramlich and the Importance of Policy Research," a conference that brings together leading practitioners of public policy analysis to illuminate current issues in the spirit of Ned's guiding principle: that good analysis is essential to making and implementing good policy.
Speakers include Betsey Stevenson (keynote), a member of President Obama's Council of Economic Advisers; four former directors of the Congressional Budget Office; and panelists and moderators from a dozen prestigious organizations.
Conference Outline:
Susan M. Collins, Joan and Sanford Weill Dean of the Ford School
Paul Courant, Harold T. Shapiro Collegiate Professor of Public Policy
Daniel Covitz, Associate Director Division of Research & Statistics, Federal Reserve9:10-10:20
Federal programs, budget policy, and income distribution
Panelists:
Sheldon Danziger, Ford School and President, Russell Sage Foundation
William G. Gale, Brookings Institution
Eugene Steuerle, Urban Institute
Moderator:
Marina von Neumann Whitman, University of Michigan
Stabilization Policy and Federal Systems
Panelists:
Michael S. Barr, University of Michigan, former Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Department of Treasury
Gerald A. Carlino, Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia
James Hines, University of Michigan Department of Economics
Moderator:
Byron Lutz, Senior Economist at the Federal Reserve
Lunch
1:00-1:45Keynote Speaker: Betsey Stevenson, Council of Economic Advisers and Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy
2:00-3:15Consumer Protection and Housing
Panelists:
Robert Avery, Federal Housing Finance Agency
Eric Belsky, Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard
Kenneth D. Wade, Bank of America
Moderator:
Sandra Braunstein, Director of Federal Reserve Consumer and Community Affairs (former)
Reflections on Current Fiscal and Budget Policy: Former Directors of the Congressional Budget Office
Panelists:
Douglas Holtz-Eakin, American Action Forum
June E. O'Neill, Baruch College-CUNY
Rudolph Penner, Urban Institute
Robert D. Reischauer, Urban Institute
Moderator:
Douglas W. Elmendorf, Current CBO Director