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Global Economic Forum
A Two-Day Seminar for High School
Social Studies Teachers
July 5–6, 2006
San Antonio
This forum helped high school
educators address key issues that impact the global
economy.
Day 1
Speakers considered the region’s
influence and role in the international spectrum as
well as cross-border activity and its impact on the
border economy. Breakout sessions on teaching international
issues and ideas for classroom applications were provided.
Day 2
The New York, Chicago, Boston
and Dallas Feds participated in a videoconference addressing
the role of Europe, China and Latin America in the global
economy. The day ended with a roundtable discussion
on incorporating the information from the videoconference
into the high school classroom.
Agenda
Wednesday, July 5
International Center
| 8:30 a.m. |
Registration
and Continental Breakfast |
| 8:55 a.m. |
Introductory
Remarks
Sherry Kiser
Director of Economic Education
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
| 9:00 a.m. |
Welcome
K. Blake Hastings
Executive Director
Free Trade Alliance San Antonio |
| 9:10 a.m. |
The
Port Authority, Trade, San Antonio and South Texas
Jorge Canavati
Vice President of Business Development
San Antonio Port Authority |
| 9:35 a.m. |
The
City of San Antonio’s Approach to Globalization
Elena Villarreal
International Trade and Marketing Manager
City of San Antonio |
| 10:00 a.m. |
Economic
Development Strategies in a Global Economy [PPT]
K. Blake Hastings |
| 10:25 a.m. |
International
Trade Center:South-West Texas Border Region [PPT]
Douglas Smith
Senior International Business Consultant
International Trade Center
University of Texas–San Antonio |
| 11:00 a.m. |
NADB
History, Performance and Outlook [PPT]
Henry E. Sauvignet
Director of Administration
North American Development Bank |
| 11:25 a.m. |
The
World Affairs Council: Helping to Develop an Informed
Citizenry
Barbara Schneider
Executive Director
World Affairs Council of San Antonio |
| 11:50 a.m. |
Wrap-up
K. Blake Hastings |
| Noon |
Lunch |
| 1:30 p.m. |
Globalization’s
Impact on Cities: The Case of the Texas–Mexico
Border [PPT]
Keith R. Phillips
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
San Antonio Branch |
| 2:15 p.m. |
Teaching
Comparative Advantage
Steve Cobb
Economics Department Chair
University of North Texas |
| 3:15 p.m. |
New
Ideas for Teaching Exchange Rates with Transition
Economies
Steve Cobb |
| 4:00 p.m. |
Reception |
Thursday, July 6
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, San Antonio Branch Office
| 8:00 a.m. |
Registration
and Continental Breakfast |
| 8:30 a.m. |
Global
Imbalances—With a Focus on the U.S. and China
[PPT]
(via satellite)
Jane Sneddon Little
Vice President and Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston |
| 9:30 a.m. |
Quo
Vadis, Latin America?Food for Thought [PPT]
Carlos Zarazaga
Executive Director, Center for Latin American Economics,
and Senior Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas |
| 10:45 a.m. |
Latin
America in Transition
Loretta García Williams
Director of Education
World Affairs Council of Dallas/Fort Worth |
| 11:30 a.m. |
Lunch |
| 12:30 p.m. |
The
European Economy: Going for Growth
(via satellite)
Amy Houpt Medearis
Senior Economist
Delegation of the European Commission |
| 1:30 p.m. |
Taking
This Conference to the Classroom
Group Participation |
| 2:30 p.m. |
Adjourn |
About the Speakers
Jorge Canavati
Vice President of Business Development
San Antonio Port Authority
Before assuming his current
position, Canavati was president of J. Canavati &
Co., a consulting firm representing an international
clientele in trade, business development and sales.
Canavati has more than 25 years’ experience in
North and Latin American foreign trade and is the author
of articles on Mexican trade and transportation. He
is on the board of various international trade organizations
and is the official Texas representative of the National
Importers and Exporters Association of Mexico, ANIERM.
Canavati serves on the international committee of the
Texas Motor Transportation Association and is chair
of the logistics committee of Free Trade Alliance San
Antonio. Canavati attended Metropolitan University of
Mexico City and Our Lady of the Lake University in Houston.
Steve Cobb
Economics Department Chair
University of North Texas
Cobb currently serves as
director of the Center for Economic Education and is
completing his eleventh year as chair of the Economics
Department at UNT. He has been published in numerous
journals and coauthored the textbook International
Economics, 5th edition. Cobb has been involved
in the National Council on Economic Education’s
Economics International Training of Trainers program
for the past 12 years, helping more than 500 faculty
members in the former Soviet Union teach economics from
a market perspective. In 2005, the NCEE presented Cobb
with the Albert Beekhuis Award for Centers of Excellence
in Economic Education. He was president of the National
Association of Economic Educators in 1999–2000.
Cobb received his Ph.D. in economics from the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
K. Blake Hastings
Executive Director
Free Trade Alliance San Antonio
Hastings is responsible for
the staffing and coordination of the Alliance’s
strategic plan development and trade development initiatives
and serves as a liaison to its institutional members
and the community at large. He oversees implementation
of the Alliance’s objectives, which include promoting
San Antonio as a hub for international commerce. Before
becoming executive director in 2001, Hastings served
in such capacities as member services director, international
trade specialist and vice president. He worked for an
export management company in New York overseeing the
export of food service equipment to Northeast Asia and
for the U.S. Trade and Development Agency in Washington,
D.C. Hastings, who studied at the University of International
Business and Economics in Beijing, has a B.A. in international
economics and an M.B.A. in international business from
George Washington University.
Jane Sneddon Little
Vice President and Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Boston
Little, who joined the Boston
Fed 40 years ago as a research assistant, was made a
vice president in 2001. Her research focuses on international
macroeconomic issues. In the past few years, she has
written or coauthored papers on the evolution of the
international monetary system, asset prices and economic
stabilization, and technology diffusion. She recently
coauthored the conference paper “U.S. Monetary
Policy in an Integrating World: 1960 to 2000.”
Little’s public service includes staff work for
the Task Force on the Health Care Industry and the Governor’s
Council on Economic Growth and Technology. She has also
been a lecturer at Simmons College. Little has a B.A.
from Wellesley College, where she also earned her M.A.L.D.
at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.
Amy Houpt Medearis
Senior Economist
Delegation of the European Commission
Medearis monitors macroeconomic
and economic policy developments in the United States
and Europe and helps foster U.S.–European cooperation
on economic, financial and employment issues. Before
joining the commission, she was vice president and Europe
analyst for the consulting firm G7 Group Inc. and vice
president of International Advisory Services, a trade
consulting group. In 1994–95, Medearis worked
at the Ministry of Economics of the German state of
Brandenburg and was a Robert Bosch Fellow in the Economic
Research Department of Dresdner Bank. Prior to that,
she was an editor at the Institute for International
Economics. Medearis received a B.A. in comparative area
studies and German from Duke University and an M.A.
in international economics and European studies from
the Johns Hopkins University Paul H. Nitze School of
Advanced International Studies.
Keith R. Phillips
Senior Economist and Policy Advisor
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, San Antonio
Branch
Phillips’ areas of
concentration include regional economics and economic
forecasting. Since joining the Fed in 1984, he has developed
indexes of leading economic indicators for Texas and
Mexico, which he uses to analyze business conditions.
He is a contributing member of the Western Blue Chip
Economic Forecasting Group, where he has been the most
accurate Texas forecaster for five of the past eight
years. His research and analysis have been covered by
CNN, The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer, USA Today, BusinessWeek,
Wall Street Journal, New York Times and media throughout
Texas. Phillips teaches courses in econometrics and
forecasting at Trinity and St. Mary’s universities
in San Antonio. He earned bachelor’s degrees in
economics and journalism and a master’s degree
in economics from the University of Missouri and a Ph.D.
in economics from Southern Methodist University.
Henry E. Sauvignet
Director of Administration
North American Development Bank
Through NADBank, Sauvignet
seeks ways to enhance the financing, development and
operation of environmental infrastructure projects along
the U.S.–Mexico border. Before assuming this position,
he was director of international affairs for the city
of San Antonio and international trade director for
the Texas Department of Economic Development. Sauvignet
has traveled extensively to promote international economic
development. He serves on the advisory boards of St.
Mary’s University Business School and the Center
for International Business Studies at Texas A&M
University and on the boards of San Antonio’s
World Affairs Council and the San Antonio–Mexico
Foundation for Education. Sauvignet has received national
awards for his work to establish San Antonio’s
foreign office program and was honored by Mexico’s
National Chamber of Commerce for his support of trade
between the U.S. and Mexico.
Barbara Schneider
Executive Director
World Affairs Council of San Antonio
Schneider, executive director
of San Antonio’s World Affairs Council since 1995,
was secretary of the World Affairs Councils of America
board in 1998–2002. In the 1980s, she served as
director of administration for the National Republican
Senatorial Committee in Washington, D.C. Before that,
she was office manager and executive secretary to the
vice president of Decision Making Information, a marketing
firm. Schneider is past president of both the Southwest
Foundation Forum and the board of the Bexar County Women’s
Center. She is a former board member of the Cancer Center
Council and was board chair of the American Red Cross,
San Antonio Chapter. Currently, Schneider is an advisor
to the board of the Society for the Preservation of
Historic Fort Sam Houston and on the board of trustees
of Hospice San Antonio.
Douglas Smith
Senior International Business Consultant
International Trade Center
University of Texas at San Antonio
Smith provides international
trade consulting for small and medium-size companies
in the Austin area. He has more than 20 years’
experience in international trade and marketing consulting
for small businesses as well as such major corporations
as IBM, Motorola and Johnson Wax; trade associations,
including the Business Round Table; and the foreign
trade commissions of Thailand, Portugal and Colombia.
Smith’s international experience includes numerous
projects involving Western Europe, South America, Asia
and Africa. He was vice president for consulting services
at Global Trade Information Services in Columbia, S.C.;
president of Carolina International Marketing Associates;
and a senior consultant for Frank Lynn & Associates,
a Chicago-based international consulting firm. He has
been a contributing editor to Textile Asia Magazine
and has published in Atlanta International Magazine,
Twin Plant News and Business Horizons.
Smith has an M.A. in government and international relations
and an M.B.A. in finance and international business
from the University of Texas at Austin.
Elena Villarreal
International Trade and Marketing Manager
City of San Antonio
Villarreal oversees and manages
the International Affairs Department’s CASA San
Antonio program—the city’s three foreign
trade offices in Mexico, located in Monterrey, Guadalajara
and Mexico City. Before joining the department in San
Antonio, Villarreal served as director of CASA San Antonio
in Monterrey. In addition, she has held the positions
of executive director and CEO of Medical Destination
San Antonio, international trade representative for
Mobil Petrochemical International and sales manager
for Grupo Industrial Monclova. During the first half
of her career, Villarreal worked for multinational companies
in bilateral trade between the United States and Mexico.
She has spent the past seven years promoting the city
of San Antonio in Mexico and helping businesses grow
internationally. Villarreal holds a B.A. in international
studies from Austin College.
Loretta García Williams
Director of Education
World Affairs Council of Dallas/Fort Worth
Williams orchestrates student
and educator forums and manages several programs in
leadership, professional development and internships.
She worked for the Plano Independent School District
for 35 years, 12 of them in middle and high school classrooms
and 23 as coordinator of the Department of Languages
Other than English. She has taught Spanish at Southern
Methodist University and adult basic education at Grayson
Junior College in Denison, Texas. Williams developed
and implemented Survival Spanish for Educators and has
made numerous presentations locally, nationally and
internationally on teaching foreign languages. Among
the honors she has received are the Plano ISD Centennial
Hero award and the Diversity Leadership Award. Williams
holds a B.S. in Spanish from the University of Albuquerque
and an M.A. in Spanish from Texas Women’s University.
Carlos Zarazaga
Executive Director, Center for Latin American
Economics, and Senior Economist
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Zarazaga has been an economist
at the Central Bank of Argentina and the Federal Reserve
Bank of Philadelphia. He also taught graduate-level
courses in the Economics Department at the University
of Minnesota and undergraduate courses in the Wharton
School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania.
His current research interests include economic policy
design for developing countries, sovereign debt defaults,
structural reforms, and international finance and trade
in emerging economies. He has presented his research
and policy papers regionally, nationally, and internationally
at academic and policymaking forums. Zarazaga’s
work has been published in books, Dallas Fed publications
and professional refereed journals, including Economic
Review, Empresa and Review of Economic Dynamics.
He holds a Ph.D. in economics from the University of
Minnesota.
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