Sung Won Sohn

This is a Korean name; the family name is Sohn.
Sung Won Sohn
Born 1944
Seoul, South Korea
Nationality American
Alma mater University of Florida
Harvard Business School
University of Pittsburgh
Known for Economist
Korean name
Hangul 손성원
Hanja 孫聖源[1]
Revised Romanization Son Seong-won
McCune–Reischauer Son Sǒng'wǒn

Sung Won Sohn (born 1944) is a Korean American economist, noted for his skill in economic forecasting. He is currently the Martin V. Smith Professor of Economics at California State University, Channel Islands. [2][3]

Personal life

Sohn was born and raised in South Korea. He graduated from Gwang-ju Che-il High School in 1962.[1] He came to the United States that year to study economics as an undergraduate at the University of Florida in Gainesville on a partial scholarship.[2][3] He earned his Master's in economics from Wayne State University, and his Ph.D. in the same field from University of Pittsburgh. He also earned an PMD from Harvard Business School.[3]

Career

One of Sohn's Ph.D. advisors, Professor Whitman, left Pittsburgh to become a member of the President's Council of Economic Advisors under the Nixon administration; she was so impressed by his work that she brought him on board as senior economist at the White House.[2] On the White House Council, he was responsible for economic and legislative matters pertaining to the Federal Reserve and financial markets. His weekly economic and financial report to the President earned him attention from President Nixon.[2]

A New York banker introduced Sohn to the president of the Northwest National Bank of Minnesota, where Sohn would move for his next job.[2] He remained with the bank through various name changes and mergers, as it became Norwest Corporation and then purchased Wells Fargo in 1998, and rose to the position of Executive Vice President and chief economist.[2]

He was chosen as one of the 100 most influential Minnesotans of the 20th century by the state's largest newspaper, the Star Tribune. Others on the list included Charles Lindberg, Sinclair Lewis, Hubert Humphrey, Walter Mondale and Charles M. Schulz.

In January 2005, Sohn moved from Minneapolis to Los Angeles to take up a position as president and CEO of Hanmi Bank. After more than three decades in Minnesota, he stated that he was looking forward to moving to a warmer climate with a larger Korean American population.[4][5] He retired from that position in December 2007.[6]

He would later become the vice chairman of fashion retailer Forever 21.[2]

In 2008, he joined the faculty of California State University, Channel Islands as Martin V. Smith Professor of Economics.[7]

In 2011, Los Angeles mayor Antonio Villaraigosa appointed him a member of the Los Angeles Harbor Commission, which has oversight authority for the Port of Los Angeles.[2] He also serves on the boards of Western Alliance Bancorporation and Claremont Graduate University. He was on the boards of First California Bank, Ministers Mutual Life Insurance Company, L.A. Music Center (Performing Arts), Foreign Affairs Council of Los Angeles, and Children's Bureau of Los Angeles.

He is the author of two books, Global Financial Crisis and Exit Strategy in 2009, and The New Economy in 2014.

Awards and recognition

In 2006, the Wall Street Journal featured a story naming Sohn as the most accurate economist in the United States. In 2010 the Journal named him as one of the five most accurate economists in the United States.In 2012 he ranked third. He was named one of the top five most accurate economic forecasters in 2001 by Bloomberg News. In 2004, a Bloomberg Markets magazine survey ranked Sohn as the U.S.' second-best GDP forecaster for the 12 months ending in June 2004.[8] In 2012 the Wall Street Journal again ranked him as one of the U.S.' best economic forecasters; he was the only representative of academia ranked in the top 10, and one of just five in the top 50.[7]

References

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