Gita Gopinath is an
Indian-American economist. The Mysore
born 46-year old Gopinath is currently the John Zwaanstra Professor of
International Studies and Economics at Harvard University. She has been
appointed as Chief Economist at the International Monetary Fund. She will take
over as the Economic Counsellor and Director of the IMF’s Research
Department from December after the current chief
economist Maurice Obstfeld retires in December. She will be the second
Indian economist after Raghuram Rajan, the former governor of Reserve Bank of
India, to become the Chief Economist of the IMF.
Naming her as the Chief
Economist, Christine Lagarde, Managing Director, IMF observed: Gopinath is “one
of the world’s outstanding economists with impeccable academic credentials, a proven
track record of intellectual leadership, and extensive international
experience. All this makes her exceptionally well-placed to lead our Research
Department at this important juncture.”
Her research focuses on
International Finance and Macroeconomics—mostly
centered on exchange rate pass through, international price-setting, emerging
market business cycles, monetary unions and debt crises. She
is co-director of the International Finance and Macroeconomics program at
the National Bureau of Economic Research. She, along with Kenneth Rogoff,
co-edited the current Handbook of
International Economics. She is the managing editor of the Review of Economic Studies and also
co-editor of the American Economic Review.
She also serves as economic adviser to many financial institutions and
governments.
Gopinath is the economic adviser
to the Chief Minister of Kerala, her home state. Reports indicate that she has
advised the Chief Minister, who belongs to Marxist party of India, to take a
leaf out of the Chile’s experiences—a country, which stepping out of its past
socialistic framework embraced new economic policy that runs on the lines of
the experiments carried out by the liberal economists, popularly called:
‘Chicago boys’. Obviously, such advices carry weight because, as she claims, she
advocated such policies more as a “trained technocrat and professional
economist.”
In 2014, she was named as one
of the top 25 economists under 45 by the IMF. World Economic Forum has chosen
her as a “Young Global Leader” in 2011. In 2018, she was elected as a fellow of
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Reacting to the generally held
opinion of many economists that the “Great Trade Collapse” that happened during
the recent global financial crisis was caused by cost shocks specific to traded
goods, Gopinath, a “very independent thinker” who “made herself a big player in international
economics”—about
whom Ben
Bernanke, one of her doctoral advisers at Princeton University and the former
Fed Chairman observed said: “Gita was certainly one of the strongest and most
promising students I ever worked with”—argued
that such price changes have almost no role in the drop in the trade. Her paper
written along with Itskhoki and Neiman on trade collapse suggests that such
decline in trade is rather quantity-driven owing to fall in consumer spending.
During the Eurozone crisis,
Gopinath published a seminal paper along with Farhi and Itskhoki which argued
that there are instruments other than exchange rate devaluations that a country
can use to gain trade competitiveness. The paper proposed fiscal-devaluation
measures such as an ad valorem tariff plus a uniform subsidy for exports as, of
course, originally proposed by Keynes, or value-added taxes, plus lower payroll
taxes for creating an equal impact as an exchange rate devaluation would do for
the economy. But for the political challenges in its implementation, Gopinath
argues that such an intervention delivers outcomes exactly like that of a
currency devaluation. Incidentally, this suggestion was partly implemented by
France.
There is another interesting
work that she did on monetary unions which commands our attention: Contrary to
the commonly held belief that it is optimal for high-debt nations to join an
austere monetary union that practices low-inflation policy, she argued that in
some cases, particularly, when debt crisis is more owing to panicky reaction of
lenders, it makes sense for high-debt nations like Greece to be in the mix of
nations with similar high debt profiles like Italy and some low-debt nations
like Germany. And the recent news about Greece
coming out of its debt-crisis is perhaps a kind of vindication of her findings.
Interestingly, as India is
now experiencing a continuously depreciating rupee, there is something relevant
for its policy makers to adopt from her research: In one of her presentations at the Fed’s
Jackson Hole Symposium, Gopinath argued that it is the degree of imports
denominated in the domestic currency versus foreign currency that defines its
impact on domestic inflation. India, whose imports are mostly denominated in
dollar terms, is obviously vulnerable for “pass through” of its currency
depreciation vis-à-vis dollar to its domestic prices, which means rise in
inflation in a scenario of depreciating rupee. She also turned down the
argument that a weaker currency for a non-US economy is good for a country’s
exports. And she even advised that
central bankers in developing countries must respond to such depreciations
pretty aggressively.
That said, it would be
interesting to watch how the IMF and its member countries particularly the developed
western countries would receive her—her line of economic argument that challenges
the IMF-advocated wisdom of the advantages of flexible exchange rates.
Whether or not there are any
takers of her research findings in our monetary policy committee, your most
obedient joins the nation in congratulating Gita Gopinath on her appointment as
Chief Economist of the IMF, particularly, at a time when the world is
witnessing protectionism and trade wars where her sane economic-sense matters
most and wishing her all the success in her new
role.
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