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Biography

Brent Neiman is theat Chicago Booth. He served from 2022-2025 at the U.S. Treasury as Counselor to the Secretary and as the, where he worked on a broad set of international economic issues, including the bilateral relationship with China, the response to Russia’s war in Ukraine, emerging market sovereign debt, IMF governance and programs, and global financial regulation.

Neiman conducts research on international macroeconomics, finance, and trade. He serves as the co-director of the International Economics and Economic Geography Initiative at theand is a Research Associate in the International Finance and Macroeconomics and the International Trade and Investment groups at the National Bureau of Economic Research and a Research Fellow at the Center for Economic Policy Research. Neiman co-founded the, previously served as an Executive Board member of theKent A. Clark Center for Global Markets at Chicago Booth, and was an associate editor ofThe American Economic Review, The Quarterly Journal of Economics,andThe Journal of International Economics.

Earlier in his career, Neiman was the staff economist for international finance on the White House Council of Economic Advisers and worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, at McKinsey and Company, and at the McKinsey Global Institute.

In 2014, Neiman was one of the eight economics professors in the United States and Canada to receive the, an award given to early-career scientists. In 2009, Neiman was named as one of 22 “” by the Chicago Council of Global Affairs. He has been a co-recipient of theand the, and was awarded a, which funded his graduate studies at Oxford.

Neiman earned a Bachelor of Science in Economics and a Bachelor of Applied Science, bothsumma cum laude, from the University of Pennsylvania in 1999. In 2000, he earned a master’s degree in mathematical modeling from Oxford University, and he earned a PhD in economics from Harvard University in 2008. Neiman joined the Chicago Booth faculty in 2008.

Research Interests

International macroeconomics, trade, and finance.

Academic Areas

  • Macroeconomics

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