Information about Jeffrey Sachs
Jeffrey David Sachs (born November 5, 1954, in Detroit, Michigan) is an American economist known for his work as an economic advisor to governments in Latin America, Eastern Europe, the former Yugoslavia, the former Soviet Union, Asia, and Africa. He is currently a professor and director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University. He is also Special Advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. From 2002 to 2006, he was Special Advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan and Director of the UN Millennium Project. He proposed "shock therapy" (though he himself hates the term) as a solution to the economic crises of Bolivia, Poland, and Russia. He is also known for his work with international agencies on problems of poverty reduction, debt cancellation, and disease control — especially HIV/AIDS, for the developing world. He is the only academic to have been repeatedly ranked among the world's most influential people by Time magazine. He has been appointed the 2007 lecturer for the BBC Reith Lectures.
Biography
Sachs graduated from Oak Park High School in Oak Park, Michigan in 1972 and received his B.A., summa cum laude, from Harvard University in 1976, and his M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard in 1978 and 1980 respectively. He holds honorary degrees from several institutions, including Simon Fraser University and Ohio Wesleyan University.Before coming to Columbia University in July 2002, Sachs spent over 20 years at Harvard University. Sachs passed the general examinations for his Ph.D. and was invited to join the Harvard Society of Fellows while still a Harvard undergraduate.[1] He joined the Harvard faculty as an Assistant Professor in 1980, and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1982 and Full Professor (with tenure) in 1983, at the age of 29, eventually becoming Galen L. Stone Professor of International Trade.
Bolivia was the first country in which Jeffrey Sachs began to develop his theories. In 1985 the economic situation in Bolivia was undermined by hyperinflation and the country was unable to pay its debt to the IMF. Jeffrey Sachs, at that time active as economic adviser to the Bolivian government, drew up a plan that was adopted as decree 21060. Whereas inflation had reached 20,000% per year in 1985,[2] when Jeffrey Sachs left the country two years later it had fallen to 11%, But his plan resulted in "lateral damage" of the already meager productive sector. The only sector which thrived was the production of coca. Whereas only 17% of labor market was employed in the coca sector in 1980, that had risen to 37% by 1990.
Sachs began advising the Polish Solidarity Movement before it took control of the government in August 1989. On January 1, 1990, following the advice of Sachs and ex-International Monetary Fund economist (former Sachs student and future assistant Treasury secretary for international affairs) David Lipton, the Polish government introduced what came to be known as "shock therapy" — the rapid conversion of all property and assets from public to private ownership. After initial shortages and inflation, prices eventually stabilized.[3]
The Russian government invited Sachs' advice on reproducing the Polish success in late 1991. Sachs introduced fellow Harvard economist Andrei Shleifer around the Russian government and it was decided that Shleifer would advise on privatization while Sachs advised macroeconomic issues.[4]
In 1995 Sachs replaced Dwight H. Perkins as director of one of several international consulting entities of the John F. Kennedy School of Government, the Harvard Institute for International Development (HIID; established in 1974),[5] resigning in 1999 to head a 1998 spinoff, the Center for International Development (CID). The CID, started with the transfer of roughly half of HIID's endowment, survived the dissolution of HIID in 2000 after two years of financial deficits and filing of an eventually successful lawsuit against Harvard by the U.S. Agency for International Development(USAID) over Andrei Shleifer's 1992–1997 HIID consulting project in Russia.[6][7][8][9] When fired by HIID in May, 2007 Shleifer laid responsibility for the scandal at Sachs' door ("I was just a consultant. It was Jeffrey's [Sachs] program, and he ran it."[10]).
Outside of Sachs' own projects CID failed to attract sustainable funding or broad scholarly involvement and, in March, 2002 Sachs resigned from Harvard to become director of The Earth Institute at Columbia University, effective July 2002.[11]
Since that date Sachs has been, in addition to his directorship, a professor in Columbia's Department of Economics, School of International and Public Affairs, and Department of Health Policy and Management; in 2003 he became Quetelet Professor of Sustainable Development. He is also Director of the United Nations Millennium Project, President and Co-Founder of Millennium Promise, and Research Associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research. Previously, Sachs has been an advisor to the IMF, the World Bank, the OECD, the World Health Organization, and the United Nations Development Programme.
In his 2005 work, The End of Poverty, Sachs wrote that "Africa's governance is poor because Africa is poor." According to Sachs, with the right policies, mass destitution — like the 1.1 billion extremely poor living on less than $1 a day — can be eliminated within 20 years. China and India serve as examples; China has lifted 300m people out of poverty in the last two decades. For Sachs a key element is raising aid from the $65 billion level of 2002 to $195 billion a year by 2015. Sachs emphasizes the role of geography, with much of Africa suffering from being landlocked and disease-prone, but stresses that these problems once recognized can be overcome: disease (such as malaria) can be controlled, and infrastructure created. Without specifically addressing these issues, political elites will continue to focus on getting resource-based wealth out of the country as fast as possible, and investment and development remain mirages.
In early 2007, the Sachs for President Draft Committee, a non-profit organization, formed to draft Jeffrey D. Sachs to run for the presidency of the United States of America in the 2008 election. [12]
Sachs claims he has developed a new branch of economics, called "clinical economics." His research interests include the links of health and development, economic geography, globalization, transitions to market economies, international financial markets, international macroeconomic policy coordination, emerging markets, economic development and growth, global competitiveness, and macroeconomic policies in developing and developed countries.
Sachs is married to Sonia Ehrlich Sachs, who is a pediatrician. They have three children, Lisa, Adam, and Hannah.
Criticism
Although Sachs is a hero to many, some economists view his proposals as dangerously naive. One of his strongest critics is New York University (NYU) Professor of Economics William Easterly who reproached The End of Poverty in his review for The Washington Post. Easterly's 2006 book, White Man's Burden, is a more thorough rebuttal of Sachs's argument that poor countries are stuck in a "poverty trap" from which there is no escape, except by massively scaled-up foreign aid. Easterly presents statistical evidence that he says proves that many newly developed countries — indeed, most of them — attained their higher status without large amounts of foreign aid as Sachs proposes. Easterly states that "So yes, do read Sachs's eloquent descriptions of poverty and his compelling ethical case for the rich to help the poor. Just say no to the Big Plan."Daniel Ben-Ami, writing on the British Internet magazine Spiked, has criticized Sachs from an opposite perspective to Easterly. Ben-Ami argued in a review of The End of Poverty that Sachs’ views represent an acceptance that underdevelopment is here to stay. He argues that despite Sachs’ "grandiose rhetoric" his goal is the long-term eradication of extreme poverty rather than the economic development and transformation of poorer societies. Ben-Ami also argued that the Sachs 2007 BBC Reith lecture embodied low horizons for the poor.
Another person to criticize Sachs is Amir Attaran, who is a scientist and lawyer and currently the Canada Research Chair in Law, Population Health and Global Development at the University of Ottawa. Sachs and Attaran have worked closely as colleagues, including to coauthor a famous study in The Lancet documenting the dearth of foreign aid money to fight HIV/AIDS in the 1990s, which led to the creation of the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. However, Sachs and Attaran part company in their opinion of the Millennium Development Goals, and Attaran argues in a paper published in PLoS Medicine and an editorial in the New York Times that the United Nations has misled people by setting specific, but immeasurable, targets for the Millennium Development Goals (for example, to reduce maternal mortality or malaria). Sachs dismisses that view in a reply to PLoS Medicine by saying that only a handful of the Millennium Development Goals are immeasurable, but Attaran also replies citing the United Nations' own data analysis (which the UN subsequently blocked from public access) showing that progress on a very large majority of the Millennium Development Goals is never measured.[13][14]
Sachs has received personal payments from the United Nations totaling $75,000 a year since (at least) 2002 for his work on the Millennium Development Goals, as revealed by a UN investigative blog (www.innercitypress.org) He initially claimed to be working pro bono for the UN and stopped accepting such personal remuneration only in 2006 when it was discovered. The research project that he headed (the Millennium Project) is the most expensive in the history of the United Nations, which continues to heavily subsidize his research. Most recently it has been alleged that his researchers from that project were hired as UN staff members without competitive tendering. [15] has a report the press conference in which Sachs acknowledges the payments and the controversy about the Millennium project is reported on.
Publications
Articles and columns
- Sustainable Developments — 2006-2007. A column in the monthly science magazine Scientific American focusing on how the earth and its climate affect world politics. The first column was published in the June 2006 issue.
- Economics and Justice. A monthly column for Project Syndicate, a non-profit association of newspapers around the world, concerning the social and environmental implications of economic growth around the world.
Monographs (books)
- Humphreys, Macartan, Sachs, Jeffrey, and Stiglitz, Joseph (eds.). "Escaping the Resource Curse" Columbia University Press ISBN 978-0-231-14196-3
- Sachs, Jeffrey (2005). The End of Poverty: Economic Possibilities for Our Time Penguin Press Hc ISBN 1-59420-045-9
- Sachs, Jeffrey (2003). Macroeconomics in the Global Economy Westview Press ISBN 0-631-22004-6
- Sachs, Jeffrey (2002). A New Global Effort to Control Malaria (Science), Vol. 298, October 4, 2002
- Sachs, Jeffrey (2002). Resolving the Debt Crisis of Low-Income Countries (Brookings Papers on Economic Activity), 2002:1
- Sachs, Jeffrey (2001). The Strategic Significance of Global Inequality (The Washington Quarterly), Vol. 24, No. 3, Summer 2001
- Sachs, Jeffrey (1997). Development Economics Blackwell Publishers ISBN 0-8133-3314-8
- Sachs, Jeffrey and Pistor, Katharina. (1997). The Rule of Law and Economic Reform in Russia (John M. Olin Critical Issues Series (Paper)) Westview Press ISBN 0-8133-3314-8
- Sachs, Jeffrey (1994). Poland's Jump to the Market Economy (Lionel Robbins Lectures) The MIT Press ISBN 0-262-69174-4
- Sachs, Jeffrey (1993). Macroeconomics in the Global Economy Prentice Hall ISBN 0-13-102252-0
- Sachs, Jeffrey (ed) (1991). Developing Country Debt and Economic Performance, Volume 1 : The International Financial System (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report) University of Chicago Press ISBN 0-226-73332-7
- Sachs, Jeffrey and Warwick McKibbin Global Linkages: Macroeconomic Interdependence and Co-operation in the World Economy, Brookings Institution, June, 277 pages. (ISBN 0-8157-5600-3)
- Sachs, Jeffrey (ed) (1989). Developing Country Debt and the World Economy (National Bureau of Economic Research Project Report) University of Chicago Press ISBN 0-226-73338-6
- Bruno, Michael and Sachs, Jeffrey (1984), "Stagflation in the World Economy"
External links
- Jeffrey Sach's Reith lectures hosted by the Royal Society in London, during April and May of 2007
- Prof. Jeffrey D. Sachs Biographical Information
- The End of Poverty
- BBC Reith Lectures
- Jeffrey Sachs discusses his book, The End of Poverty, at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs.
- Article on Jeff Sachs in the Yale Economic Review
- The Earth Institute at Columbia University
- Jeffrey Sachs' syndicated monthly op/ed columns for Project Syndicate
- Talk on The End of Poverty at the Carnegie Council
- Interview on PBS' Commanding Heights
- Interview on The Colbert Report, March 2006
- The UN Millennium Project
- Millennium Development Goals
- Millennium Promise
- Jeffrey Sachs: The globalization of the unreal and the impoverishment of all
- Official website of the Sachs for President Draft Committee
- Jeffrey Sachs Charlie Rose interviews
- Audio/Video recording of Jeffrey Sachs lecture as part of the University of Chicago World Beyond the Headlines series.
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The Earth Institute was established at Columbia University in 1995. The research institute's stated mission is to address complex issues facing the planet and its inhabitants, with particular focus on sustainable development and the needs of the world's poor.
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Ban Ki-moon (born June 13 1944)[] is a South Korean diplomat and the current Secretary-General of the United Nations.
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Kofi Atta Annan (born April 8, 1938) is a Ghanaian diplomat who served as the seventh Secretary-General of the United Nations from January 1 1997 to January 1 2007, serving two five-year terms. He was the co-recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2001.
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The Millennium Project is an initiative that focuses on research implementing the organizational means, operational priorities, and financing structures necessary to achieve the Millennium Development Goals or (MDGs).
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shock therapy refers to the sudden release of price and currency controls, withdrawal of state subsidies, and immediate trade liberalization within a country. Prominent economist Jeffrey Sachs was the foremost proponent of shock therapy for several emerging economies.
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The economy of Bolivia has had a historic pattern of a single-commodity focus. From silver to tin to coca, Bolivia has enjoyed only occasional periods of economic diversification.
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A Reith Lecture is a lecture in a series of annual radio lectures given by leading figures of the day, commissioned by the BBC and broadcast on BBC Radio 4. They were begun in 1948, in honour of the first Director-General of the BBC, John Reith.
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