David McCormick (President of IQT):
"Public service
McCormick was Under Secretary of the Treasury for International Affairs from 2007 to 2009, serving as the United States' leading international economic diplomat.[6] In this role, he was the principal adviser to Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson on international economic issues and oversaw policies in the areas of international finance, trade in financial services, investment, economic development and international debt policy.
McCormick coordinated financial market policy with the Group of Seven (G7) industrialized countries and the Group of Twenty (G20) global economies, working with finance ministers as well as their deputies.[2] He served as Secretary Paulson's point person on the international response to the 2008 financial crisis.[7] McCormick was credited with using his relationships with top executives and policy makers around the world to help coordinate the Treasury Department’s response.[8]
McCormick's career in government began in 2005 when he was nominated and confirmed as the Commerce Department's Under Secretary of Commerce for Industry and Security.[9] Later he became the Deputy National Security Advisor for International Economic Policy and was George W. Bush's personal representative and negotiator to the G-8 industrialized countries before moving to the Treasury Department in 2007.[6] In 2013, McCormick was one of 131 Republican Party members to sign an amicus curiae brief submitted to the Supreme Court "in support of the freedom to marry".[10]
In early 2019 McCormick was under consideration for U.S. Secretary of Defense.[11]
Business career
From 1996 to 1999, McCormick worked as a consultant at McKinsey & Co. based in Pittsburgh.[2]
In 1999, McCormick joined FreeMarkets, a global provider of software and services. Later that same year the company conducted an initial public offering.[12] McCormick was promoted to president of FreeMarkets in 2001 and was named Chief Executive Officer in 2002. He successfully sold FreeMarkets to Ariba in 2004 for approximately $500 million[2][13] and then remained at Ariba as president for the next 18 months before he was asked to join the Bush administration.
In 2009, McCormick was also appointed a faculty member at Carnegie Mellon’s Heinz College and named a Distinguished Service Professor of Information Technology, Public Policy and Management.[14]
McCormick joined Bridgewater Associates in 2009.[2] He serves as Co-CEO where he is responsible for overseeing the management of the firm,[15] as well as advising some of the largest investors in the world including pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments, and central banks on their investments and the global economy, with a particular focus on the intersection of policy and markets.[2]"
https:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_McCormick