Walter E. Hoadley Explained

Walter E. Hoadley
Birth Date:16 August 1916
Alma Mater:University of California, Berkeley
Known For:Statistics, business economics

Walter E. Hoadley (1916 – 2003) was an American business economist, statistician, and Federal Reserve Bank chair. He served as president of the American Statistical Association and the American Finance Association.

Career

Hoadley earned three academic degrees at the University of California, Berkeley, an A.B. in 1938, an M.A. in 1940, and a Ph.D. in economics in 1946.[1]

He went on to serve as an economics professor at UC Berkeley, and a vice president of the Bank of America.[1] Hoadley retired from the Bank of America in 1981. He developed expertise in economic forecasting, global financial markets, planning, and management.[2] The Commonwealth Club of California invited him to give public speeches 25 times.

After retiring from the Bank of America in 1981, he joined the Hoover Institution as a senior scholar.

Personal life

Hoadley married college classmate Virginia Alm and they were together more than 60 years. He was a devoted Methodist and spoke frequently of the importance of his religion to him (Miller, p.v).[3]

Publication

External links

Notes and References

  1. "In memoriam." The Free Library. 2003 Springer 08 Dec. 2023
  2. Germaine LaBerge. 2000. Interview with Walter E. Hoadley, Business Economist, Federal Reserve System Director, and University of California Regent, 1938-2000. Regional Oral History Office, University of California.
  3. Arjay Miller, Introduction to interviews with Walter E. Hoadley, Regional Oral History Office.