Economist Gita Gopinath to leave IMF to rejoin Harvard University faculty
Gopinath joined the IMF in January 2019 as chief economist and was promoted to the post of first deputy managing director in January 2022.
PTI
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Indian-American economist Gita Gopinath
New York, 22 July
Indian-American economist Gita Gopinath who is serving as the first
deputy managing director at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), said she is
rejoining Harvard University as an economics professor.
"After nearly 7 amazing years at the IMF, I have decided to return
to my academic roots," Gopinath, the first female chief economist in IMF
history, said in a post on X.
Gopinath will rejoin the Harvard Economics Department on 1 September as
the inaugural Gregory and Ania Coffey Professor of Economics.
She said she is "truly grateful" for her time at IMF, where
she was first chief economist and then served as first deputy managing
director, describing her time there as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to
serve the IMF’s membership during a period of unprecedented challenges.
"I now return to my roots in academia, where I look forward to
continuing to push the research frontier in international finance and
macroeconomics to address global challenges, and to training the next
generation of economists," she said.
Gopinath joined the IMF in January 2019 as chief economist and was
promoted to the post of first deputy managing director in January 2022. Prior
to joining the IMF, Gopinath was the John Zwaanstra Professor of International
Studies and of Economics at Harvard University’s economics department (2005-22)
and before that she was an assistant professor of economics at the University
of Chicago’s Booth School of Business (2001-05).
IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva described Gopinath as an
"outstanding colleague—an exceptional
intellectual leader, dedicated to the mission and members of the Fund, and a
fabulous manager, always showing genuine care for the professional standing and
wellbeing of our staff.”
Georgieva said Gopinath came to the IMF as a highly respected academic
in macroeconomics and international finance and admiration for her only grew
through her time at the IMF, where her “analytical rigor was paired with
practical policy advice to the membership during an especially challenging
period, which included the pandemic, wars, the cost-of-living crisis, and major
shifts in the global trading system.”
Georgieva added that Gopinath steered the IMF’s analytical and policy
work with clarity, striving for the highest standards of rigorous analysis at a
complex time of high uncertainty and rapidly changing global economic
environment.
Gopinath oversaw the IMF’s multilateral surveillance and analytical work
on fiscal and monetary policy, debt, and international trade. As a key member
of IMF senior leadership team, she represented the organisation in many
international fora, notably the G-7 and G-20.
'As Chief Economist, Gita ensured that the World Economic Outlook
remained the preeminent report on the global economy—an especially impressive
achievement during the Covid-19 pandemic which presented an unprecedented
challenge to our membership,” Georgieva said.
Gopinath also co-authored the 'Pandemic Plan' on how to end the Covid-19
crisis, a contribution which has widely been hailed as filling an important
global gap by setting targets to vaccinate the world at feasible cost,
Georgieva said.
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