Served key roles with White House Council of Economic Advisers and Department of Commerce
As they interact with Susan Helper in the classroom and on research, students at ϳԹ are getting a chance to learn first-hand what goes into national economic policy-making at the highest levels. Helper spent the last two years on leave from Weatherhead School of Management, managing a team of about 20 researchers as chief economist at the U.S. Department of Commerce. The year before that, she worked for President Barack Obama as a senior economist with the White House Council of Economic Advisers (CEA). Her CEA office was just west of the White House, in the ornate Eisenhower Executive Office Building. Helper, the Frank Tracy Carlton Professor of Economics, returns to the university with a trove of economics research experience—much of which she is imparting this semester in a SAGES seminar, titled “Making: Innovation, Work and Competition.” The course examines an array of economic questions, such as:- Does off-shoring of production to places like China threaten or enhance U.S. technological strength?
- Do efforts to protect manufacturing in the U.S. hurt people in developing countries?
- How will the development of “maker spaces” (such as ϳԹ’s Sears think[ box ]) affect how products are produced?
- How does high-wage Germany run a trade surplus in manufacturing?
- Does environmental regulation help or hurt manufacturing?