Economic Policy Responses to the Covid-19 crisis in the Euro Area and Japan

© DWIH/Istockphoto Mars Yu

On September 9, 2020 the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) and the German Centre for Research and Innovation Tokyo (DWIH Tokyo)  hold a web forum on the recent economic policy responses in the Euro Area and Japan. Governments and central banks all over the world have taken historically bold fiscal and monetary policy measures to fight the dramatic, yet still not fathomable economic impact of the Covid-19 crisis.

While the announcements have certainly calmed sentiments of market participants, many important questions remain as to how the proposed measures are to be implemented effectively given their gigantic scope and the lack of precedence. Actions need to be taken in a timely manner, as the impact of lockdowns, social distancing and travel restrictions is being felt immediately, and they need to be targeted accurately, because the economic impact varies extremely across industries and households. The speakers in this web-forum will address these concerns by taking Japan and the Euro area, especially Germany as examples.

Programme
19:00 Welcome by Franz Waldenberger, DIJ
19:05 Introduction by Yuri Okina
19:10 Keynote by Masaaki Shirakawa
19:30 Keynote by Volker Wieland
19:50 Moderated discussion with Q&A organized by Yuri Okina and Markus Heckel, DIJ
20:25 Closing remarks by Franz Waldenberger, DIJ

Please register until September 8 (Tue) per email to: heckel@dijtokyo.org

Masaaki Shirakawa was previously Governor of the Bank of Japan. He was appointed as Governor in April 2008, and left the Bank in March 2013. He was also Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors of the Bank for International Settlements between January 2011 and March 2013. Currently, he is Distinguished Guest Professor at Aoyama-Gakuin University and a mem-ber of the Group of Thirty—a private, non-profit, international body composed of senior poli-cymakers from central banks, supervisory agencies, the financial sector, and academia. Masaaki Shirakawa joined the Bank of Japan in 1972. At the Bank, he held various key posi-tions, including the Bank’s Chief Representative in the Americas and Executive Director in charge of monetary policy. Other professional experiences include professorship at the Kyoto University School of Government from July 2006 to March 2008. Masaaki Shirakawa studied economics at the University of Tokyo (B.A.) and at the University of Chicago (M.A.).

Volker Wieland, Ph.D., holds the Endowed Chair of Monetary Economics at the Institute for Monetary and Financial Stability (IMFS) at Goethe University Frankfurt and is a member of the German Council of Economic Experts. He is also a Research Fellow at the Centre for Econom-ic Policy Research (CEPR) and a member of the Kronberger Kreis and the Scientific Advisory Council of the German Ministry of Finance. In 1995, Wieland received a Ph.D. in Economics from Stanford University. Before joining Goethe University, he was a senior economist at the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System in Washington, DC. He has served as a consultant to the European Central Bank, the European Commission, and the Reserve Bank of Finland. His research has been published in leading economic journals. Recently, Wieland has been coordinating the creation of a public archive of macroeconomic models for comparative purposes: the Macroeconomic Model Data Base.

Yuri Okina is Chairperson of the JRI where she was previously chief senior economist. She has published extensively on Japan’s financial system, most recent of which is “Financial Crisis and Prudential Policy”. She had been a member of the Board of the Industrial Revitalization Com-mittee of Japan. Now she is a member of the Financial System Council of FSA and works as a chair of the Committee for Japan’s Future 2,0. She had been a Visiting Professor of Keio Uni-versity and has a Doctor degree in Economics from Kyoto University.

Franz Waldenberger has been Director of the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) in Tokyo since 2014. He is on leave from Munich University where he holds a professorship for Japanese Economy. His research focuses on the Japanese Economy, Corporate Governance and International Management. He is editor in chief of the international peer reviewed journal Contemporary Japan. His recent publications include Governance, Risk and Financial Impact of Mega Disasters. Lessons from Japan, Springer 2019 (co-edited with A. Kamesaka).

Markus Heckel is a Senior Research Fellow at the German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ) since 2018. From 2012 to 2018, he has been working at the Faculty of Economics, Goethe Uni-versity Frankfurt.

Event Information

September 9, 2020, 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM

Online
Organizer(s): German Institute for Japanese Studies (DIJ), German Centre for Research and Innovation Tokyo (DWIH Tokyo)