Maximo Torero | |||||||||
Office: | Chief Economist and Assistant Director General of the Economic and Social Development Department Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) | ||||||||
President: | Qu Dongyu, Director General | ||||||||
Term Start: | January 2019 | ||||||||
Predecessor: | Kostas G. Stamoulis | ||||||||
Birth Date: | 1967 5, df=y | ||||||||
Birth Place: | Lima, Peru | ||||||||
Education: | University of California Department of Economics | ||||||||
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Maximo Torero (born 27 May 1967) is a Peruvian economist. He is currently the chief economist and assistant director general for the Economic and Social Development Department at the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in Rome, Italy.
Torero earned his B.S. from University of the Pacific (Peru). He earned his MA (1993) and Ph.D. (1998) in economics from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA).
He worked as a senior researcher and a member of the executive committee at Group of Analysis for Development (GRADE) in Peru before joining the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) in Washington, D.C. in 2003. From 2004 to 2016, he was the director of the Markets, Trade, and Institutions Division at IFPRI. He also led the Global Research Program on Institutions and Infrastructure for Market Development and was the director for Latin America. Between 2016 and 2018, he served as the executive director for Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay at the World Bank Group in Washington, D.C.
Torero was the chief of party for a US$449.6 million investment (2007-2012) by the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) in rural infrastructure with a significant component of water and sanitation in El Salvador. The five-year investment consisted of three projects: connectivity project, human development project, and productive development project. The Connectivity Project included the Northern Transnational Highway (NTH) and the Network of Connecting Roads (NCR).[1] Torero led the production of the reports, data and methodology with his team at IFPRI on El Salvador - Northern Transnational Highway.[2]
Torero has worked on property rights, specifically urban and rural titling and crop choices. His work, cited in “The Mystery of Capital Deepens” (The Economist, August 24, 2006),[3] shows that households with title were more likely to secure a loan from the government-backed Materials Bank.
He is a professor on leave at the University of the Pacific (Peru) and an Alexander von Humboldt Fellow at University of Bonn, Germany.
Torero is the recipient of the Ford Foundation Fellowship, the Inter-American Development Bank Fellowship, and Fulbright Program Fellowship. He also received 1997-1998 Ford Foundation ISOP Interdisciplinary Program for Students of Development Areas,[4] University of California Dissertation Year Fellowship; in 2000, he received the Georg Foster Research Fellowship of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.[5]
He has won the World Award for Outstanding Research on Development given by the Global Development Network twice. In 2000, Maximo Torero and Javier Escobal won the award for their joint work on the geographical dimension of development, with the work titled “How to Face An Adverse Geography:The Role of Private and Public Assets”, Javier Escobal and Maximo Torero, GRADE (Outstanding Research on Development Award 2000).[6] [7] Torero received the Chevalier de l'Ordre du Mérite Agricole in 2014.
Journal articles and book chapters
Books