• Print
  • Email

Last Updated: 02/01/12

News Release

Saint Joseph High School from Indiana Wins Midwest Fed Challenge Competition

CHICAGO - A team of six students from Saint Joseph High School in South Bend, Indiana, won the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago’s Midwest Fed Challenge Competition.

 

Saint Joseph High School competed against teams from Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin in the finals of the competition to become champions.

 

The Fed Challenge was developed to encourage greater awareness among students of how the U.S. economy functions and the role of the Federal Reserve in the economy. Each team is required to analyze current economic data, develop a monetary policy recommendation and defend that recommendation in front of a panel of judges. The team prepares a 25-minute demonstration, which includes a 15-minute presentation on the economy and a 10-minute period where students answer questions from the judges.

 

Presentations must include a discussion of economic conditions as of the day of the competition; a forecast of near-term changes in economic, financial and international conditions, such as unemployment and inflation; identification of conditions or situations that warrant attention in the formulation of monetary policy; and a recommendation as to whether the Fed should move to raise or lower interest rates.

 

The following is a list of team members’ names from Saint Joseph High School:

 

  • Julie Chismar, Coach
  • Phil DePauw, Coach
  • Tim Bradley
  • Gracie Gallagher
  • Conor Levey
  • Graham Murphy
  • Austin O’Brien
  • Nick Wawrykow

 

 

To learn more about the Fed Challenge, visit the Chicago Fed’s Web site at:

 

/sitecore/service/notfound.aspx?item=web%3a%7b4D90F7CF-C40F-46B8-B264-67641279E768%7d%40en 

 

 

The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago is one of 12 regional Federal Reserve Banks that, along with the Board of Governors in Washington, D.C., constitute the nation's central bank. The Chicago Fed serves the Seventh Federal Reserve District, which encompasses the northern portions of Illinois and Indiana, southern Wisconsin, the lower peninsula of Michigan, and the entire state of Iowa. In addition to providing check processing and other services for financial institutions, each Reserve Bank serves as a bank for the U.S. government, supervises member banks and bank holding companies, monitors economic conditions in its district, and participates in the formulation of national monetary policy.

 

Contact Us
Media Relations
(312) 322-2387
Having trouble accessing something on this page? Please send us an email and we will get back to you as quickly as we can.

Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, 230 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60604-1413, USA. Tel. (312) 322-5322

Copyright © 2024. All rights reserved.

Please review our Privacy Policy | Legal Notices