Lawrence Summers
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Image:Larry Summers.jpg Lawrence Henry Summers (born November 30, 1954) is an American economist, politician, and academic. He was Secretary of the Treasury for the last year and a half of the Clinton administration, and since 2001 has served as the 27th President of Harvard University.
On February 21, 2006, Summers announced his intention to step down effective June 30, 2006. Former University President Derek Bok will act as Interim President while the University searches for a replacement. Summers has been invited to return to the University following a planned sabbatical for the 2006-07 academic year as one of Harvard's select University Professors. According to friends, however, he may decline the invitation and instead find work on Wall Street or with the 2008 Democratic presidential campaign.
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Early life
Born in New Haven, Connecticut on November 30, 1954, Summers is the son of two economists - both professors at the University of Pennsylvania - as well as the nephew of two Nobel laureates in economics: Paul Samuelson (sibling of father Robert Summers, who changed the family name from Samuelson to Summers) and Kenneth Arrow (his mother's sibling). He spent most of his childhood in Penn Valley, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, where he attended Harriton High School.
At age 16, he entered the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), where he originally intended to study physics but soon switched to economics (B.S., 1975). He was also an active member of the MIT debating team. He attended Harvard University as a graduate student (Ph.D., 1982), where he studied under economist Martin Feldstein. He has had stints teaching at both MIT and Harvard. In 1983, at age 28, Summers became one of the youngest tenured professors in Harvard's history. Recently, in December 2005, Summers married a Harvard English professor, Dr. Elisa New.
Larry has three children by his first wife, Victoria Perry: Pamela and Ruth, identical twins, and Harry.
Professional life
Academic economist
As a researcher, Summers has made important contributions in many areas of economics, primarily public finance, labor economics, financial economics, and macroeconomics. To a lesser extent, Summers has also worked in international economics, economic demography, economic history, and development economics. His work generally places emphasis in the analysis of empirical economic data in order to answer well-defined questions (for example: Does saving respond to after-tax interest rates? Are the returns from stocks and stock portfolios predictable?, Are most of those who receive unemployment benefits only transitorily unemployed?, etc.) For his work he received the John Bates Clark Medal in 1993 from the American Economic Association (an honor economists often consider as prestigious as the Nobel Prize). In 1987 he was the first social scientist to win the Alan T. Waterman Award from the National Science Foundation. Summers is also a member of the National Academy of Sciences.
Public official and educational administrator
Image:Lawrence H Summers sig.jpg Summers left Harvard in 1991 and served as Chief Economist for the World Bank (1991–1993) and later in various posts in the United States Department of the Treasury under the Clinton administration. From 1999 to 2001 he served as Secretary of the Treasury, a position in which he succeeded his long-time political mentor Robert Rubin. In 2001, he left the Treasury and returned to Harvard as its President.
Controversies
World Bank Pollution Memo
In December 1991, while at the World Bank, Summers signed a memo written by staff economist Lant Pritchett which argued among other things (according to its author; the full memo is not public) that free trade would not necessarily benefit the environment in developing countries. An "ironic aside" made an argument that in fact the developed countries ought to be exporting more pollution to those developing countries. This aside was leaked to the media as a serious, standalone memo, and a public outcry ensued.
Early controversy as President of Harvard
Summers is a zealous proponent of free trade and globalization, and his positions on a number of politically-charged subjects outside his specialty tend to fall to the right of the average members of American academia. This, compounded by his brusque, confrontational style of management, has made him controversial as President of Harvard, particularly among his colleagues in the humanities and social sciences.
In the fall of 2001 Summers attracted national media attention when he criticized prominent African-American Studies professor Cornel West, complaining in a private meeting that West was missing too many classes, contributing to grade inflation, neglecting serious scholarship, and devoting too much time to political activism and spoken-word poetry. West, who later called Summers both uninformed and "an unprincipled power player" in describing this encounter in his book Democracy Matters (2004), subsequently returned to his earlier position at Princeton University.
In 2002, Summers controversially stated that a campaign by Harvard and MIT faculty to have their universities divest from companies with Israeli holdings was part of a larger trend among left-leaning academics that is "anti-Semitic in effect, if not in intent."
Differences between males and females
Template:Main In January 2005, Summers suggested at an economic conference that one of the causes of the fewer women than men in science and engineering professorships might be that fewer women than men had the very high levels of "intrinsic aptitude" that such jobs required. An attendee made his remarks public, and a firestorm followed in the national news media and on Harvard's campus.
Summers' opposition and support at Harvard
On March 15, 2005, members of Harvard's Faculty of Arts and Sciences, which instructs graduate students in GSAS and undergraduates in Harvard College, passed 218-185 a motion of "lack of confidence" in the leadership of Summers, with 18 abstentions. A second motion that offered a milder censure of the president passed 253 to 137, also with 18 abstentions. [1]
The lack of confidence measure is different from a "no-confidence" vote, which in the British parliamentary system causes the fall of a government, and it has no formal effect on the president's position. The members of the Harvard Corporation, the University's highest governing body, are in charge of the selection of the president and have issued statements strongly supporting Summers.
FAS faculty are not unanimous in their comments on Summers. Influential psychologist Steven Pinker defended the legitimacy of Summers's January remarks. When asked if Summers’ remarks were "within the pale of legitimate academic discourse," Pinker responded "Good grief, shouldn’t everything be within the pale of legitimate academic discourse [...] There is certainly enough evidence for the hypothesis to be taken seriously." [2]
In July 2005, the only African American board member of Harvard Corporation, Conrad K. Harper, resigned saying he was angered both by the university president's comments about women and by Summers being given a salary increase. (Some reports suggest Harper's support of Summers may have first started to erode earlier because of the Cornel West controversy.) The resignation letter to the president said, "I could not and cannot support a raise in your salary, ... I believe that Harvard's best interests require your resignation." [3] [4]
Resignation
On February 20, 2006, rumors began to swirl around Harvard's campus and alumni mailing lists that Summers would announce his resignation the following day.
On February 21, 2006, Summers announced his intention to step down at the end of the school year. Former University President Derek Bok will act as Interim President while the University searches for a replacement. Summers has been invited and agreed to return to the University following a planned sabbatical for the 2006-07 academic year as one of Harvard's select University Professors.
References
- Clinton, Bill (2005). My Life. Vintage. ISBN 140003003X.
- Finder, Alan and Kate Zernike (February 21, 2006). Harvard President Has Decided to Resign, Officials Say. New York Times
- How Larry Got His Rep, The Harvard Crimson, 2005-03-03, a long background piece on the controversies around Summers
- Template:NoteTemplate:Cite journal
External links
- Official bio (at Harvard)
- Who Is Larry Summers? BusinessWeek, May 24, 1999.
- How the Great Brain Learned to Grin and Bear it Slate, June 29, 2001.
- Renaissance Man The Guardian, October 5, 2004.
- Larry Summers' War Against the Earth CounterPunch
- Institutional Investor: How Harvard Lost Russia
- Lawrence of Absurdia
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Categories: Jewish-American politicians | Jewish American history | 1954 births | American economists | Debaters | Harvard alumni | Living people | Members and associates of the US National Academy of Sciences | MIT alumni | Presidents of Harvard University | United States Secretaries of the Treasury | World Bank Chief Economists