Gary David Cohn (born August 27, 1960) is an American businessman and philanthropist who served as the 11th director of theNational Economic Council and chief economic advisor to PresidentDonald Trump from 2017 to 2018.[2][3][4] He managed the administration's economic policy agenda. Before serving in theWhite House, Cohn was president and COO ofGoldman Sachs, where he worked for more than 25 years.[5] Cohn was appointed vice-chairman ofIBM on January 5, 2021.[6]
Following his White House service, Cohn became an advisor and venture capital investor for companies operating in the cybersecurity, blockchain infrastructure, and medical technology sectors. He is on the Board of Advisors for Hoyos Integrity, a startup company employing biometric blockchain technology for secure communications and digital payments, and vice chairman of IBM.[7][8] Cohn is also the chairman of the advisory board at Pallas Advisors, a national security strategic advisory firm based in Washington, D.C.[9]
Gary Cohn was born to anEastern EuropeanJewish family,[10][11] the son of Victor and Ellen Cohn,[12] and was raised inShaker Heights, Ohio. His father was an electrician who later became a real estate developer.[13] Cohn was diagnosed withdyslexia at a young age, and attended four schools by the time he reached sixth grade.[14] His childhood experiences with dyslexia were a featured case study in the bookDavid and Goliath by Canadian journalistMalcolm Gladwell.[15] Cohn studied atGilmour Academy for high school and graduated in 1979.[16][17]
Cohn started his career at theU.S. Steel home products division inCleveland, Ohio.[19] After a few months, he left U.S. Steel and became anoptions dealer in theNew York Mercantile Exchange.[19] He taught himself the basics of options by reading about it in the days between meeting the hiring manager and joining the New York Mercantile Exchange.[20]
Cohn was hired byGoldman Sachs in 1990 and became a partner at the firm in 1994.[21] In 1996, he was named head of thecommodities department, and in 2002, he was named the head of the Fixed Income, Currency and Commodities (FICC) division. In 2003, he was named co-head of Equities, and in January 2004, Cohn was named the co-head of global securities businesses.[22] He became president and Co-Chief Operating Officer, and director in June 2006.[23] While at Goldman Sachs, Cohn was also a member of the firm's board of directors and Chairman of the Firmwide Client and Business Standards Committee.[4]
In 2010, Cohn testified toCongress on Goldman Sachs' role in the2008 financial crisis.[24] He testified: "During the two years of the financial crisis, Goldman Sachs lost $1.2 billion in its residential mortgage-related business. We did not 'bet against our clients', and the numbers underscore this fact."[25]
On January 5, 2021, Cohn was appointed Vice Chairman ofIBM's board of directors.[26][7]
On January 20, 2017, Cohn took office as Director of theNational Economic Council (NEC) in PresidentDonald Trump's administration, a position that did not require Congressional confirmation. By February 11, 2017,The Wall Street Journal described Cohn as an "economic-policy powerhouse",[27][28] andThe New York Times called him Trump's "go-to figure on matters related to jobs, business, and growth".[29] With the confirmation of Trump's nominee forSecretary of Treasury,Steven Mnuchin, pending in the Senate, Cohn filled in the "personnel vacuum" and pushed "ahead on taxes, infrastructure, financial regulation, and replacing health-care law".[27] In addition to his $285 million Goldman Sachs severance package,[30] Cohn also sold a stake in theIndustrial and Commercial Bank of China, the world's largest bank (as of 2017[update]), then valued at $16 million.[31]
Vice President Mike Pence, Gary Cohn, and Steve Mnuchin watch tax reform vote.[32]
Cohn supports reinstating theGlass-Steagall legislation, which would separate commercial and investment banking.[33][34]
Under theTrump administration, Cohn was cited by the press as a supporter ofglobalism, and was given nicknames such as "Globalist Gary" and "Carbon Tax Cohn".[35] He,Jared Kushner,Ivanka Trump, andDina Powell were referred to by opponents as the "Wall Street wing" of the Trump administration.[35] He was said to be at odds with the populist faction led bySteve Bannon, when Bannon wasWhite House Chief Strategist.[35][36] He was also rivals with trade advisorPeter Navarro, who favored tariffs and was hawkish towards China; Navarro later described Cohn as "one of the worst and most treacherous misfits of the entire Trump administration".[37]
Cohn led the Trump administration's efforts to pass theTax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. In a 2019 article inThe Wall Street Journal, Cohn pointed to an increase of $6,000 in real disposable personal income per household, as well as the creation of seven million jobs, as evidence of the success of tax reform.[38]
Cohn reportedly considered resigning from the National Economic Council after the 2017Charlottesville rally[39] and criticized the Trump administration's response to the rally, saying, "I believe this administration can and must do better in consistently and unequivocally condemning"white supremacists.[40] In August 2020,Jim Sciutto publishedThe Madman Theory, a book in which Cohn said in response to Trump saying that there were "very fine people on both sides" of the protests which included white supremacists, "Citizens standing up for equality and freedom can never be equated with white supremacists,neo-Nazis, and theKKK."[41]
By September 2017, the Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy had been folded into the National Economic Council, which meant that Navarro would report to Cohn.[42]
On March 6, 2018, Cohn announced his intention to resign; the announcement followedTrump's proposal to impose import tariffs on steel and aluminum and Trump's cancellation of a meeting with end users of steel and aluminum that Cohn had arranged in an attempt to dissuade him from the tariffs.[43] He was replaced byLarry Kudlow on April 2.[44][45] Cohn's departure solidified the influence of Navarro.[46]
Bob Woodward's 2018 bookFear: Trump in the White House relates two instances when Cohn removed draft letters from Trump's desk so that Trump would not see them.[47] One of the letters would have canceled a key trade agreement with South Korea, and one would have withdrawn the U.S. unilaterally from theNAFTA trade agreement with Canada and Mexico.[48][49] Trump's opinion of Cohn reportedly remained good after he resigned; Trump called him a "rare talent" who had done a "superb job". Cohn supported other candidates during the2024 Republican Party presidential primaries, but after Trump won the2024 United States presidential election, Cohn became a "Trump ambassador" to Wall Street for appointments and policy.[50]
After leaving the White House, Cohn became an advisor and venture capital investor for companies in the cybersecurity, blockchain, and digital payments sectors. He is on the Board of Spring Labs, a startup using blockchain technology to share consumer credit data,[51] and Sotera Digital Security, a company that has created a mobile phone for secure communications.[52] Cohn is also a key advisor for Machine Zone[53][unreliable source?] and Abryx, a biomaterial science company.[54] At Sotera Digital, he is involved in the strategy and rollout of a next-generation secure mobile phone aimed at government and corporate customers.
In April 2020, Cohn was appointed to the Risk & Governance Advisory Board ofStarling, a technology company in applied behavior sciences.[55]
In August 2020, Cohn and investorClifton S. Robbins launched Cohn Robbins Holdings Corp.[56]
In 2019, Cohn was a visiting fellow at the Institute of Politics at theHarvard Kennedy School[57] where he taught a seminar alongside former U.S.Senator Heidi Heitkamp on economic, demographic, and national security policy.[58] Cohn and Heitkamp focused on structural economic and demographic issues. Spring 2019 Fellows at the Institute included MayorAndrew Gillum, Rep.Carlos Curbelo, and MayorMitch Landrieu.[59]
While at Harvard, Cohn was the lead sponsor for the Road to 2092: Save Social Security, the first policy hackathon organized by the Harvard Institute of Politics.[60] The competition featured over 250 students from 28 universities; the winning team presented its policy brief at the U.S. Capitol and the White House and was featured on MSNBC.[61]
Cohn and his wife are founding board members of theNew York University Child Study Center. The couple funded the Pevaroff Cohn Professorship inChild and Adolescent Psychiatry at theNew York University School of Medicine in 1999. He financed the Gary D. Cohn Endowed Goldman Sachs Chair in Finance[64] and the Gary D. Cohn Scholarship[65] both at American University, hisalma mater. In 2015 Cohn financed the Gary D. Cohn and Brother Robert LaVelle Endowed Scholarship in honor of Brother Robert LaVelle, who was retiring after 35 years as head of Gilmour Academy, where Cohn attended high school.[66]
In 2009, theHillel International building atKent State University was named the Cohn Jewish Student Center in recognition of a gift from Cohn and his wife.[67] It is the first Hillel building built on a state university campus.[68]
Cohn has been a supporter ofReviving Baseball in Inner Cities, and has supported the nonprofit youth development organization Harlem RBI (now called DREAM) since 2011. At that time, Harlem RBI was given the chance to build its own charter school.Mark Teixeira of theNew York Yankees and Harlem RBI director Rich Berlin asked Cohn to help them raise the capital they needed to build the school.[69] On June 17, 2013, Cohn was honored at the annual "Bids for Kids" gala in order to raise funds for Harlem RBI. He said in an interview that Harlem RBI is a project "very near and dear to my heart".[69] In 2015, Cohn won $360,000 for Harlem RBI as winner ofBloomberg's Brackets for a Cause competition.[70]
Cohn is active in various charitable causes related to education and healthcare. He is a member of the Board of Trustees of NYU Langone Health and on the Board of Overseers of the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.[71]
^Insider, 26 September, 2018Archived 2019-01-14 at theWayback Machine Trump's former national security adviser confirms Gary Cohn stole documents off Trump's desk to keep the US from leaving major trade deals