Takatoshi Ito Headshot

Takatoshi Ito

Professor of International and Public Affairs

Takatoshi Ito Headshot

International Affairs Building, Room 927


Personal Details

Focus areas: International finance, Japanese economy, Asian financial markets, monetary policy

Takatoshi Ito joined the faculty of SIPA as a Professor of International and Public Affairs in January 2015. An internationally renowned economist, Ito is an expert on international finance, macroeconomics, and the Japanese economy who served from 2006 to 2008 as a member of the Prime Minister’s Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy. He also held senior positions in the Japanese Ministry of Finance and at the International Monetary Fund. Ito served as Dean of the University of Tokyo’s Graduate School of Public Policy for the past two years and as professor at Japan’s National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies. He has served as a visiting professor at both Columbia and Harvard and taught at other institutions. He earned his PhD in economics at Harvard University.

Ito has had distinguished academic and research appointments such as President of the Japanese Economic Association in 2004; fellow of the Econometric Society since 1992; research associate at the National Bureau of Economic Research since 1985; and faculty fellow at the Centre for Economic Policy Research since 2006. He was editor-in-chief of Journal of the Japanese and International Economies, and is co-editor of Asian Economic Policy Review. In an unusual move for a Japanese academic, Ito was also appointed in the official sectors, as senior advisor in the Research Department, International Monetary Fund (1994–97) and as deputy vice minister for international affairs at the Ministry of Finance, Japan (1999–2001). He served as a member of the Prime Minister’s Council on Economic and Fiscal Policy (2006–2008). In 2010, he was a co-author of a commissioned study of the Bank of Thailand’s 10th year review of its inflation targeting regime. He frequently contributes op-ed columns and articles to the Financial Times and Nihon Keizai Shinbun.

He is an author of many books including The Japanese Economy (MIT Press, 1992), The Political Economy of the Japanese Monetary Policy (1997) and Financial Policy and Central Banking in Japan, with T. Cargill and M. Hutchison, (MIT Press, 2000), An Independent and Accountable IMF, with J. De Gregorio, B. Eichengreen, and C. Wyplosz (1999). He is also the author of more than 130 academic (refereed) journal articles in journals such as Econometrica, American Economic Review, and Journal of Monetary Economics and chapters in books on international finance, monetary policy, and the Japanese economy. His research interests includes capital flows and currency crises, microstructures of foreign exchange rates, and inflation targeting. He was awarded the National Medal with Purple Ribbon in June 2011 for his excellent academic achievement.

Education

  • PhD in Economics, Harvard University
  • MA in Economics, Harvard University
  • MA in Economics, Hitotsubashi University
  • BA in Economics, Hitotsubashi University

Honors and Awards

  • The (Emperor’s) Medal with Purple Ribbon for exceptional academic achievement, 2011
  • Honorary Doctorate (Doctor Honoris Causa) University of Chile, 2015

Research And Publications

In The Media

Following Japanese Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga's announcement that he will not seek re-election, Takatoshi Ito expands on the candidates running to replace him as leader of Japan's Liberal Democratic Party and the new prime minister.

Sep 19 2021
Project Syndicate

The Japanese government needs to take more action in the face of a rising COVID-19 infection rate, writes Takatoshi Ito.

Aug 25 2021
Project Syndicate

Takatoshi Ito hopes that the $90bn endowment fund will allow Japan's universities to regain ground in the global rankings of top institutions.

Jul 29 2021
Nikkei Asia

Professor Takatoshi Ito talks about trends in the portfolios of Japan’s top public pension funds.

Jul 25 2021
Pensions & Investments

Takatoshi Ito comments on the deflation problem in Japan with the Coronavirus.

Jul 14 2021
The New York Times