RICHARD H SINES '61,
World economist
Dick was born in San Diego, California. His parents moved the family
to Columbus when he was in the second grade. He attended West Broad
Street Elementary School and later West High. He was active in Hillcrest
Baptist Church. Dick worked after school and on weekends for his father,
who had a small shop repairing and cleaning automatic air and gas
nozzles, but he still found time to do fun things at church and school.
He was fortunate to travel to the national Boy Scout Camp in Philmont,
N.M., the National American Baptist Camp in Green Bay, WI, and Boys
State in Athens, OH.
After graduating he attended
Miami (OH) University where he also worked 20-30 hours a week at the
University library. Because of the potential for travel and his interest
in the escalating situation in Vietnam and the Far East, after graduation
he applied for the Peace Corps. He was assigned to the Philippines
where he taught mathematics at the Leyte Institute of Technology on
the island of Leyte, famous for General Douglas McArthur's beachhead
in World War II.
Dick then accepted a full-time teaching position at The Ohio State
University and finished his Masters Degree. During that time he switched
his focus to economics as he realized his main interest was in international
economic development. While pursuing a Ph.D. in the Department of
Economics at Ohio State he received another Masters in Economics.
About a year before finishing his Ph.D. requirements, including his
econometric-oriented Ph.D. thesis on the economic development of the
Venezuelan Manufacturing Sector, he accepted a full-time position
at George Washington University, located in downtown Washington, D.C.
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Subsequently he took a position as Chief Economist for the largest U.S.
apparel manufacturing association. This job took him around the world
as an advisor. Because of his interest in working with the economic
development of Third World countries, he and his wife, Elizabeth, change
routes. She joined the State Department as a foreign service officer.
He resigned from his job and studied French intensely. They moved to
French-speaking Abidjan, Ivory Coast with their two young daughters,
Katherine and Stephanie. Dick began work as a private economic consultant
for many (primarily French-speaking) West African countries.
By far his biggest challenge
is his current job in Washington, D.C. as Senior Economic Advisor to
the U.S. Government on Iraq reconstruction. He works on projects aimed
at infrastructure development and economic governance in an effort to
try to win the peace in Iraq and change the Iraqi economy from a socialist,
statist Iraqi economic system into a modern, mixed market economy. His
current number-one major concern is assisting in the transition of Iraq's
Oil-for-Food Program that will be transferred from the United Nations
World Food Program to the Coalition Provisional Authority headed by
Paul Bremer of the U.S. This program currently benefits nearly 27 million
Iraqis, most of whom are completely dependent on the program for their
food.
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