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Jerry Jordan became president and chief executive
officer of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland in March 1992
and retired in January 2003. In his capacity of the President
of the Reserve Bank of Cleveland, he was a member of the Fed
Open Market Committee which is responsible for setting Fed's
interest rates.
Mr. Jordan worked in government, academia, commercial banking,
and previously in the Federal Reserve System. After receiving a
Ph.D. in economics at U.C.L.A., he was employed at the Federal
Reserve Bank of St. Louis, rising to the position of senior
vice president and director of research. While at the St. Louis
Fed, he was on leave to serve as a consultant to the Deutsche
Bundesbank in Frankfurt.
Mr. Jordan's commercial banking experience includes five years
at Pittsburgh National Bank and seven years at First Interstate
Bancorp in Los Angeles. Mr. Jordan served as a Member of
President Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers in 1981-82,
during which time he was also a member of the U.S. Gold
Commission. Preceding and following his service in Washington,
he was dean of the R.O. Anderson School of Management at the
University of New Mexico.
In 1997, Mr. Jordan received an honorary doctor of economics
degree from Denison University and in 2001 an honorary doctor
of business degree from Capital University. He is a member of
the Mont Pelerin Society, the Academic Advisory Council of The
Institute of Economic Affairs in London, and the Business
Advisory Board of the Reason Foundation. He is also a senior
fellow at The Fraser Institute, an adjunct scholar at the Cato
Institute and a past president of the National Association of
Business Economists.
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