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Afterwards, he went to work for [[Norwest]] (which became [[Wells Fargo]] in 1998), where he was the [[chief economist]] and Executive Vice President. After working as President and CEO of Hanmi Financial Corp in [[Los Angeles]], Mr. Sohn became Vice Chairman of [[Forever 21]]. He is also a professor of economics at [[California State University, Channel Islands]].
Afterwards, he went to work for [[Norwest]] (which became [[Wells Fargo]] in 1998), where he was the [[chief economist]] and Executive Vice President. After working as President and CEO of Hanmi Financial Corp in [[Los Angeles]], Mr. Sohn became Vice Chairman of [[Forever 21]]. He is also a professor of economics at [[California State University, Channel Islands]].

On Wednesday, September 17, 2008 Sohn was quoted by the Associated Press: "The economy is not short of money, it is short of confidence". Considering the fact that the Federal Reserve creates "money" out of thin air (without the backing of any real commodity), this statement attributed to Sohn, who was once (as stated above) a senior economist on the [[President's Council of Economic Advisors]] during the [[Richard Nixon|Nixon]] administration, where he was responsible for economic and legislative matters pertaining to the [[Federal Reserve]] and financial markets, was not quite understood by skeptics of Sohn's expertise and political neutrality.


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Revision as of 03:43, 21 September 2008

Sung Won Sohn
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of Florida
Harvard Business School
University of Pittsburgh
Known forEconomist

Sung Won Sohn is a renowned Korean American economist. He was named one of the top five most accurate economic forecaster in 2001 by Bloomberg News. Sohn studied economics at the University of Florida. He earned an MBA from Harvard Business School and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Pittsburgh.

Sung Won Sohn was a senior economist on the President's Council of Economic Advisors during the Nixon administration, where he was responsible for economic and legislative matters pertaining to the Federal Reserve and financial markets.

Afterwards, he went to work for Norwest (which became Wells Fargo in 1998), where he was the chief economist and Executive Vice President. After working as President and CEO of Hanmi Financial Corp in Los Angeles, Mr. Sohn became Vice Chairman of Forever 21. He is also a professor of economics at California State University, Channel Islands.