Secretary Paul O'Neill swore Kenneth Dam in as Deputy Secretary
of the Treasury on August 7, 2001. The Senate voted by unanimous
consent to confirm Dam on August 3, 2001.
As Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, Dam advises and assists the
Secretary in the supervision and direction of the Department and
its activities, and succeeds the Secretary in his absence, sickness,
or unavailability. The Deputy Secretary plays a primary role in
the formulation and execution of Treasury policies and programs
in all aspects of the Department's activities.
Mr. Dam has been the Max Pam Professor of American and Foreign
Law at the University of Chicago Law School, a position from which
he is now on leave of absence.
His prior government positions include Deputy Secretary of State
(1982-85), Executive Director of the White House Council on Economic
Policy (1973), and Program Assistant Director for national security
and international affairs at the Office of Management and Budget
(1971-73). He has also served over the years as a consultant and
an advisor to a number of U.S. government agencies. He received
the Secretary of State’s Distinguished Service Award in 1985.
After graduating from the University of Chicago Law School in
1957, Mr. Dam served as a law clerk to U.S. Supreme Court Justice
Charles Whittaker (1957-58), an associate with Cravath, Swaine &
Moore in New York (1958-60), and a law professor at the University
of Chicago when not in government from 1960 to 1980. In 1980 he
became Provost of the University of Chicago, where he served until
being appointed by President Reagan as Deputy Secretary of State
in 1982.
Upon leaving the State Department in 1985, he became a corporate
vice president for law and external relations of IBM, a position
he held until 1992. In 1992, he served on an interim basis as president
and chief executive officer of the United Way of America in order
to lead an investigation of a highly publicized scandal in the leadership
of that organization and to reorganize its staff and governance.
Thereafter, he rejoined the University of Chicago Law School faculty,
where in recent years he has taught courses on international finance,
international economic policy, and patent law.
Mr. Dam is a well-known arbitrator in complex litigation. From
1996 to 2001 he served as System Arbitrator under the collective
bargaining agreement between the National Basketball Association
and the National Basketball Players Association.
He has served on the board of a number of public policy institutions,
including the Council on Foreign Relations (New York), the Chicago
Council on Foreign Relations, and the Brookings Institution. He
was co-chairman of the Aspen Strategy Group from 1991 to 2001 and
was, during 1999 and 2000, chairman of the German-American Academic
Council. He served from 1987 to 2001 as a member of the board of
Alcoa.
Among his many publications are the following books: The Rules
of the Global Game: A New Look at US International Economic Playmaking
(2001); Economic Policy Beyond the Headlines (with George P. Shultz)
(2d ed. 1998); The Rules of the Game: Reform and Evolution in the
International Monetary System (1982); Oil Resources: Who Gets What
How? (1976); and The GATT: Law and International Economic Organization
(1970).
His undergraduate education was at the University of Kansas.