Steve Radelet

Official Photo
Chief Economist

Steve Radelet is the chief economist for USAID. During 2010, he served as senior adviser for development for the secretary of state, where he advised leadership on strategies to strengthen and elevate development across the U.S. Government. From 2002 to 2010, he was a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, where his work focused on economic growth, poverty reduction, foreign aid, debt and trade.

Radelet served as an economic adviser to the President of Liberia from 2005-2009, and was founding co-chair of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network. From 2000 to 2002, he was deputy assistant secretary of the treasury for Africa, the Middle East and Asia. From 1990 to 2000, Radelet was a fellow at the Harvard Institute for International Development, director of the institute's macroeconomics program, and a lecturer on economics and public policy at Harvard University. He has also served as resident adviser to the Ministry of Finance in Indonesia and The Gambia, and he was a Peace Corps Volunteer in Western Samoa.

Radelet is the author of Emerging Africa: How 17 Countries are Leading the Way (2010) and Challenging Foreign Aid: A Policymaker's Guide to the Millennium Challenge Account (2003), and co-author of Economics of Development (6th edition, 2006), a leading undergraduate textbook.  He holds master's and PhD degrees in public policy from Harvard University, and a B.S. in mathematics from Central Michigan University.

Last updated: June 08, 2012