Jamaican Immigrant Susan M. Collins Becomes First Black Woman To Lead A Federal Reserve Bank

(Photo from University of Michigan) 

Economist Susan M. Collins has become the first Black woman to lead one of the 12 region­al Federal Reserve banks since the cen­tral bank sys­tem was cre­at­ed in 1914.
She was appoint­ed the next pres­i­dent of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston on Feb. 9 and will start in her new role in July. Collins has been provost and exec­u­tive vice pres­i­dent for aca­d­e­m­ic affairs at the University of Michigan since 2020. 
A Harvard- and MIT-trained econ­o­mist with exten­sive expe­ri­ence in gov­ern­ment and acad­e­mia, Collins, 63, is only the sec­ond woman to helm the Boston Fed. Cathy Minehan was pres­i­dent from 1994 through 2007.
Collins will also be on the cen­tral bank’s pow­er­ful Federal Open Market Committee, whose man­date is to pro­mote full employ­ment and sta­ble con­sumer prices. Collins, whose par­ents immi­grat­ed from Jamaica, became a U.S. cit­i­zen in 1997. 
In a recent inter­view, Collins indi­cat­ed she would focus on both tra­di­tion­al Fed con­cerns, such as the labor mar­ket, and the kind of com­mu­ni­ty-ori­ent­ed ini­tia­tives the cen­tral bank has focused on in recent years. “I’ll note that a com­mon theme through­out my career has been a com­mit­ment to the mis­sion of pub­lic ser­vice to improve lives — whether through edu­ca­tion, research, or pol­i­cy,” she said.
Read the full sto­ry here-https://​fin​u​rah​.com/​2​0​2​2​/​0​2​/​1​4​/​j​a​m​a​i​c​a​n​-​i​m​m​i​g​r​a​n​t​-​b​e​c​o​m​e​s​-​f​i​r​s​t​-​b​l​a​c​k​-​w​o​m​a​n​-​c​h​o​s​e​n​-​t​o​-​l​e​a​d​-​a​-​f​e​d​e​r​a​l​-​r​e​s​e​r​v​e​-​b​r​a​n​ch/