A female former Fed economist said economics is a 'disgrace' and blasted her profession as racist and sexist
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Saloni Sardana
Jul 29, 2020, 22:36 IST
Wikipedia
A former female Federal Reserve economist has called the economics profession a "disgrace" for its lack of racial and gender diversity.
Claudia Sahm wrote in a lengthy blog that the lack of diversity and inclusion in economics "degrades our knowledge and policy advice."
"Do you know how many Native American women are economist? Very few. Do you know how many Black economists work at the Fed? One out of 406," she wrote.
Claudia Sahm, who previously served as a section chief at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve system between 2007-2019, titled the blog, which ran to some 6,000 words: "Economics is a disgrace."
"Economics is a disgrace. The lack of diversity and inclusion degrades our knowledge and policy advice," Sahm, who is currently the director of macroeconomic policy at the Washington Center for Equitable Growth, said.
"We hurt economists from undergraduate classrooms to offices at the White House. We drive away talent; we mistreat those who stay; and we tolerate bad behavior."
"Do you know how many Native American women are economist? Very few. Do you know how many Black economists work at the Fed? One out of 406. Economics is a disgrace," she added.
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In the post, Sahm documents numerous examples of racist behavior by economists, and instances of sexism that she herself experienced.
Sahm tells of dozens of episodes where she was made to feel like her work was inadequate during her first year as an economist at the height of the financial crisis, and how she was undeserving of her economics doctorate despite "getting the top rating" in her performance review in 2008.
"My experiences and those of others taught me that new economists are vulnerable. They are easy to harass and intimate. They have the least power among economists; do not know what is acceptable; and often have imposter syndrome," she said.
Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell. Powell did not lead the Fed during the time Sahm worked there.Carolyn Kaster/AP
Sahm added: "From 2008 to 2011, one man economist in private and in front of others demeaned my expertise."
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But she said that even though a Fed colleague shielded her, the colleague fell short of advising Sahm to file a complaint with the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Sahm, who says she has bipolar disorder, says her mental health suffered during her time at the Fed, blaming in part the central bank's culture.
She wrote in the blog that she made a number of attempts to take her own life during her time at the central bank.
Sahm said there needs to be greater democratization in the industry and the sector must attract greater diversity to reverse the toxic environment of the profession.
"Efforts to change our culture are cheap talk if we do not act. Instead of a victory lap, we should be ashamed of the lack of progress and the sloppy implementation," she wrote.
The Federal Reserve declined to comment on the contents of Sahm's blog post when contacted by Business Insider.
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