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Senior Economist and Policy
Advisor
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Thomas F. Siems is senior economist
and policy advisor in the Research Department at the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas. He conducts economic
and financial research to develop a comprehensive understanding
of globalization, including how new ideas (technologies
and policies) impact productivity and economic growth.
Siems is also a senior lecturer in the Engineering Management,
Information and Systems Department in the School of
Engineering at Southern Methodist University and an
advisory board member of the Cato Institute's Project
on Social Security Choice.
Siems has published more than
50 articles, some of which have appeared in such journals
as Journal of Money, Credit and Banking, European
Journal of Political Economy, Research in Finance, Business
Economics, Review of Financial Economics, The Annals
of Operations Research, and various Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas publications. Siems is the only two-time
winner of NABE’s Edmund A. Mennis Contributed
Paper Award, having won the award in 2006 for his co-authored
paper, “Strengthening Globalization’s Invisible
Hand: What Matters Most?” and in 2005 for his
paper, “Who Supplied My Cheese? Supply Chain Management
in the Global Economy.”
Siems earned a B.S.E. in industrial
and operations engineering from the University of Michigan
in 1982 and an M.S. and Ph.D. in operations research
from Southern Methodist University in 1985 and 1991,
respectively. In addition, Siems is a 1989 graduate
of the Public Finance Institute at the University of
Michigan and a 1991 alumnus of the Graduate School of
Banking at Colorado. Siems began his career with the
Federal Reserve in 1984.
Siems is active in the Bank's
economic education programs and has taught economics,
statistics, finance, operations management and other
engineering and business courses at SMU, LeTourneau
University and the University of Dallas.
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