Jeffrey Lacker
From Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond:
Mr. Lacker began his term August 1, 2004. He is a native of Lexington, Ky., and was born in 1955. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics in 1977 from Franklin & Marshall College. Following graduation, he joined Wharton Econometrics in Philadelphia, Pa., and went on to earn a doctorate in economics in 1984 from the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Lacker was an assistant professor of economics at the Krannert School of Management at Purdue University from 1984 to 1989 before joining the Bank in 1989 as an economist in the banking area of the Research department. He was named research officer in 1994, vice president in 1996 and senior vice president and director of research in May 1999.
Mr. Lacker is the author of numerous articles in professional journals on monetary, financial and payment economics, and he has presented his work at universities and central banks worldwide. From 1992–1993 he taught at The College of William and Mary, and in 1997, he was a visiting scholar at the Swiss National Bank.
Mr. Lacker is a member of the executive committee of Venture Richmond and serves as director for the boards of the Council for Economic Education, the World Affairs Council of Greater Richmond and Richmond’s Future. He is also a member of the advisory board of ROSMY and serves on the University of Richmond board of trustees. He and his wife, Lisa Halberstadt, have two sons, Benjamin and Daniel.
Mr. Lacker began his term August 1, 2004. He is a native of Lexington, Ky., and was born in 1955. He received a Bachelor of Arts degree in economics in 1977 from Franklin & Marshall College. Following graduation, he joined Wharton Econometrics in Philadelphia, Pa., and went on to earn a doctorate in economics in 1984 from the University of Wisconsin. Mr. Lacker was an assistant professor of economics at the Krannert School of Management at Purdue University from 1984 to 1989 before joining the Bank in 1989 as an economist in the banking area of the Research department. He was named research officer in 1994, vice president in 1996 and senior vice president and director of research in May 1999.
Mr. Lacker is the author of numerous articles in professional journals on monetary, financial and payment economics, and he has presented his work at universities and central banks worldwide. From 1992–1993 he taught at The College of William and Mary, and in 1997, he was a visiting scholar at the Swiss National Bank.
Mr. Lacker is a member of the executive committee of Venture Richmond and serves as director for the boards of the Council for Economic Education, the World Affairs Council of Greater Richmond and Richmond’s Future. He is also a member of the advisory board of ROSMY and serves on the University of Richmond board of trustees. He and his wife, Lisa Halberstadt, have two sons, Benjamin and Daniel.
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Fed Raises Interest Rates 0.25 Point in Unanimous Vote
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FOMC Members Wanted to Convey Dec. Liftoff May be Appropriate - Minutes
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Fed Says U.S. Economy has Been Expanding at Moderate Pace; Doesn't See Global Developments Restraining Growth
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Fed Officials Said 'Prudent' to Wait for Clarity on Outlook
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Fed Leaves Rates Unchanged
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Fed Leaves Interest Rates Unchanged
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FOMC Saw Conditions Still Approaching Those Warranting Liftoff; Officials Expressed Concern About Greece - June Minutes
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Fed Says Labor Market Slack has 'Diminished Somewhat' - FOMC Statement
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Many Fed Officials saw June Rate Rise as Unlikely - FOMC Minutes
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Fed Officials Favoring Liftoff Later in 2015 Cited Dollar, Oil
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Fed Drops 'Patient' Stance on Interest Rate; Rate raise 'remains unlikely' at April FOMC meeting
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Many Fed Officials Inclined to Stay at Zero Longer; Dropping 'Patient' May Lead to Date Focus - FOMC Minutes
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UPDATE: Fed Expects Inflation to Rise Gradually Toward 2%; Can be Paient in Raising Rates - Minutes
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There's 'No Preset Timetable' for Raising Rates - Fed's Lacker
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Fed Officials saw Rate Rise Unlikely Before April - FOMC Minutes
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UPDATE: Fed Officials Saw Need to Watch for Inflation Expectations to Drop - FOMC Minutes
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Fed Officials Saw Global Slowdown Among Risks to U.S. Outlook
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Many Fed Officials Said Job Gains Might Bring Rate Rise Sooner; Labor Market Still Far from Normal
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Some Fed Officials Saw Investors as Too Complacent on Risk - FOMC Minutes
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Fed saw No Inflation Risk in Fueling Job Growth, Minutes Show