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Words near each other
・ Diana Dreman
・ Diana Dudeva
・ Diana Dutra
・ Diana E. H. Russell
・ Diana E. Murphy
・ Diana Eccles, Viscountess Eccles
・ Diana Eden
・ Diana Edulji
・ Diana El Jeiroudi
・ Diana Elles, Baroness Elles
・ Diana Eng
・ Diana Estrada
・ Diana Evans
・ Diana Ewing
・ Diana Express
Diana Farrell
・ DIANA FEA
・ Diana Fehr
・ Diana Ferrus
・ Diana Fessler
・ Diana Finda Konomanyi
・ Diana Fortress
・ Diana Fortuna
・ Diana Fountain
・ Diana Fountain, Bushy Park
・ Diana Fountain, Green Park
・ Diana Fowler LeBlanc
・ Diana Francis (peace activist)
・ Diana Franco
・ Diana Frey


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Diana Farrell : ウィキペディア英語版
Diana Farrell

Diana Farrell is the founding President and Chief Executive Officer of the JPMorgan Chase Institute, a global think tank dedicated to delivering data-rich analyses and expert insights for the public good.
Previously, Ms. Farrell was the Global Head of the McKinsey Center for Government (MCG), providing research, proprietary data, and other tools to support government leaders focused on improving performance. In addition, she was a leader of McKinsey’s global Public Sector Practice, and a member of their Partner Review Committee.
From 2009 to 2011, Farrell was Deputy Director of the United States National Economic Council (NEC) and Deputy Assistant on Economic Policy to President Barack Obama. She was also a member of the Presidential Task Force on the Auto Industry.〔http://www.ustreas.gov/press/releases/tg36.htm〕〔http://www.whorunsgov.com/Profiles/Diana_Farrell〕 While at the White House, Farrell directed interagency processes for the administration’s financial regulatory reform, housing and housing-finance policy, and innovation and competitiveness agendas.
On November 22, 2010, Farrell announced that she would be leaving the administration by the end of the year. Lawrence Summers, then the Director of the NEC, who had previously announced that he would return at the end of the year to Harvard University, noted that Farrell had "played a central role" in the efforts of the administration to encourage economic growth, restructure the auto industry, and respond to the housing crisis. Summers further stated: "Her natural talent as a policy maker and her good judgment made her invaluable in setting a course for economic recovery."
Prior to serving in government, Farrell was the Director of the (McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) ), McKinsey & Company's economics research arm. While at McKinsey she was also a leader of the Global Financial Institutions and Global Strategy practices. Prior to joining McKinsey, she worked for Goldman Sachs in New York.
Farrell has a B.A. from Wesleyan University in Economics (College of Social Studies) and an M.B.A. from Harvard Business School. She is a member of Council on Foreign Relations, the Aspen Strategy Group, the Aspen Program on the World Economy, the (Bretton Woods Committee ), and the Trilateral Commission. She is a member of the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council and was Vice-Chair of the organization’s Future of Government Global Agenda Council. She is on the Wesleyan University board of trustees and is married with two children.
==Research==

Farrell has written extensively on government effectiveness, growth, productivity, regulation and offshoring. Her work has appeared in academic journals, books, and on the op–ed pages of leading international publications, and she is a frequent speaker at major U.S. and global conferences. Farrell is the author and editor of over 20 reports and articles and 4 books. She is the editor an anthology series on driving growth, the productivity imperative and offshoring based on MGI research, published by Harvard Business Press in 2006, and the co-author with Lowell Byran or ''Market Unbound'', published by John Wiley & Sons in 1996.
In 2003, Farrell was the author of a paper in which she argued that sending American jobs overseas might be "as beneficial to the U.S. as to the destination country, probably more so."
In a video for the McKinsey Global Institute, where she formerly served as a director, Farrell describes four "newly powerful" brokers. One of these is "Asian economies which are...generating significant surpluses."
Farrell is a supporter of regulation of large banks. In an interview with National Public Radio, she stated: "We have created them, and we're sort of past that point, and I think that in some sense, the genie's out of the bottle and what we need to do is to manage them and to oversee them, as opposed to hark back to a time that we're unlikely to ever come back to or want to come back to."

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