Richard C. Koo | |
Birth Place: | Kobe, Japan[1] |
Spouse: | Chyen-Mei |
Children: | 2 |
Profession: | Economist |
Alma Mater: | University of California, Berkeley (BA) Johns Hopkins University (MA) |
Native Name: | 辜朝明 |
Richard C. Koo (ja|リチャード・クー, pronounced as /ja/; ; born 1954) is a Taiwanese economist living in Japan specializing in balance sheet recessions. He is Chief Economist at the Nomura Research Institute.[2] [3]
Koo was born in Kobe. His father, Koo Kwang-ming, was an activist in the Taiwan independence movement then living in exile in Japan, and the brother of the prominent Taiwanese businessman Koo Chen-fu.[4] Koo lived in Tokyo for 13 years in his youth, and later attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he received a B.A. degree in political science and government in 1976.[1] He then proceeded to Johns Hopkins University for graduate school, where he received a M.A. degree in 1981.[1]
Upon graduation from Johns Hopkins University, Koo worked at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York as an economist from 1981 to 1984.[1]
He then joined Nomura Holdings in 1984 as its first expatriate researcher and a senior economist from 1984 to 1997.[5] [6] [1] He later became the chief economist at Nomura Research Institute starting in 1997.[1]
Landon Thomas wrote about Koo's analysis in late 2011 in The New York Times, saying that Koo's 2011 "causes, cure, and politics" publication "has gone viral on the Web". Thomas was discussing the divergence between the way the U.S. and British governments addressed the 2007–2008 financial crisis and measures by European governments during the European debt crisis.[7]
Some of Koo's videos and links are below: