Brent Neiman | |
Office: | Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Finance and Development |
Predecessor: | Geoffrey Okamoto |
President: | Joe Biden |
Term Start: | March 15, 2023 |
Education: | University of Pennsylvania (BSE, BAS) Oxford University (MSc) Harvard University (PhD) |
Brent Neiman is an American academic, economist, and government official who serves as the acting assistant secretary of the Treasury for International Finance and Development at the United States Department of the Treasury in the Biden Administration.[1] [2]
Neiman attended the University of Pennsylvania and earned a Bachelor of Science in Economics and a Bachelor of Applied Science in 1999. In the following year, he received a master's degree from Oxford University. Neiman completed his doctorate in economics from Harvard University in 2008.
Neiman is the Edward Eagle Brown Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He co-founded the Global Capital Allocation Project and was a co-director of the Initiative for Global Markets and the Becker Friedman Institute Initiative for International Economics at the University of Chicago. In addition, he was a research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a research fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research. His research focuses on international finance, macroeconomics, and international trade.[3]
He served as the staff economist for international finance on the White House Council of Economic Advisors. Neiman also worked at the Federal Reserve of Chicago, McKinsey and Company and, McKinsey Global Institute.[4]
In August 2021, Neiman was nominated to serve as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Finance. He was confirmed by the United States Senate on March 15, 2023, by a vote of 54–40. Prior to his confirmation, Neiman served as a Counselor to the Secretary of the Treasury.[5] [6]
In September 2020, Neiman gave a speech at the Peterson Institute for International Economics on cross-border debt, sovereign debt restructuring, and challenges to the global financial infrastructure that focused on China’s debt practices. In September 2023, Neiman gave a speech discussing the financial policy benefits of bilateral engagement between the U.S. and China.[7] [8] [9]