Scheller College of Business
Take a Virtual Tour of the Scheller College of Business


Communications
Hope Wilson
Director of College Relations/Communications
Email Icon
Brad Dixon
Communications
Manager
Email Icon
Joe Macri
Online Communications Manager
Email Icon
Alan Sears
Graphic Designer
Email Icon
Andrew Jarrett
Web Developer
Email Icon
Patricia Smith
Events Coordinator
Email Icon
Related Links
icon @TBS Newsletter
icon Alumni Magazine
icon Georgia Tech News Room
icon Research Horizons
icon Tech Cable Network
icon Technique
icon Whistle
icon WREK Radio
spacer
dotline
Lords of Finance Author Ahamed to Discuss Economic Crisis in April 7 Lecture

Author Liaquat Ahamed, who will speak on April 7, won the 2009 Financial Times-Goldman Sachs Best Business Book of the Year.
Author Liaquat Ahamed, who will speak on April 7, won the 2009 Financial Times-Goldman Sachs Best Business Book of the Year.



Published on:03-19-2010

Liaquat Ahamed, author of the best-selling book Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World, will discuss parallels between the Great Depression and the current economic crisis on Wednesday April 7 in the second annual Thomas R. Williams Distinguished Lecture.

Ahamed, whose talk is titled "Lessons from the Great Depression," will speak from 4:30 to 5:30 PM in LeCraw Auditorium of the Management building (800 West Peachtree Street NW). A reception with light refreshments will follow in the Thornton Atrium.

Ahamed, who has been a professional investment manager for 25 years, won the 2009 Financial Times-Goldman Sachs Best Business Book of the Year for Lords of Finance, which discusses the lead up to the Great Depression. According to a review in The New York Times, the book "easily connects the dots between the economic crises that rocked the world during the years his book covers and the emergencies that beset us today."

While conventional wisdom holds that the Great Depression that began in 1929 resulted from a confluence of events beyond any one person's or government's control, Ahamed writes that the decisions taken by a small number of central bankers were the primary cause of the economic meltdown— the effects of which set the stage for World War II and reverberated for decades.

Through the years, Ahamed has worked at the World Bank in Washington and the New York-based partnership of Fischer Francis Trees and Watts, where he served as chief executive. He is currently an adviser to several hedge fund groups, including the Rock Creek Group and the Rohatyn Group. He also is a director of Aspen Insurance Co. and serves on the board of trustees of the Brookings Institution and the New America Foundation.
 
About the Williams Lecture

The Williams lecture is named in honor of Thomas R. Williams, a 1950 graduate of Georgia Tech who died in 2002.

After graduation, Williams worked as an industrial engineer and then a management consultant before joining National City Bank of Cleveland in 1965. He became chairman of that bank in 1969, three years before being named president of First National Bank of Atlanta.

He guided First National from third place to first in metro Atlanta deposits, eventually helping arrange that bank's merger with Wachovia in 1985. He became chairman of the board of Wachovia, and then retired in 1987.

More than a talented executive, Williams was an important civic leader, volunteering for many cultural and educational organizations. He served as president of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and chairman of the United Negro College Fund, among many other activities.

The Williams Lecture is a special event of the IMPACT Speaker Series, organized by Georgia Tech's Institute for Leadership and Entrepreneurship.

Contact Information

Hope Wilson
Director of Communications
404.385.0580

View Profile

Brad Dixon
Assistant Director of Communications
404.894.3943

View Profile

Email this article.

* mandatory fields
Enter your name: *
Enter your email address: *
Enter recipient's email address:
(Separate multiple recipients by comma)
*
Message:





Accountability | Legal & Privacy Information | RSS

800 West Peachtree NW, Atlanta GA 30308
© 2013 Georgia Institute of Technology