Off the wire
2015 World Championships the most followed in table tennis history  • Chile condemns killing of 2 student protesters  • Finland to send more troops to NATO's naval exercise in Baltic Sea  • Nigeria to play qualifier against Chad in northern Kaduna: FA  • Stadium stoush to leave thousands of Aust'n fans out of Grand Final  • Myanmar gov't forces seize last stronghold of Kokang army  • Interview: Yuan-ruble settlement to help expand China-Russia financial cooperation: Chinese banker  • Xinhua China news advisory -- May 15  • 2nd LD Writethru: S.Korea freezes policy rate at record-low for two months  • Victoria home of purest, cheapest form of drug "ice" in Australia: report  
You are here:   Home

IMF chief economist retires

Xinhua, May 15, 2015 Adjust font size:

The chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) announced his retirement on Thursday, leaving for a Washington-based nonprofit think tank to further his research career.

Olivier Blanchard, who assumed the post of economic counsellor and director of the Research Department at the IMF in 2008, has helped the Fund navigate through the choppy waters of the financial crisis, and further enhanced the reputation of the Fund by leading his department to work on its flagship publication, the World Economic Outlook, the IMF said in a statement.

"As one of the world's leading macroeconomists, Olivier has been on the forefront of the Fund's response to the global financial crisis, spurring a fundamental rethinking of macroeconomic policy that is still reverberating in academic and policy circles," IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said in the statement.

A citizen of France, Blanchard has spent most his professional life in the United States. Before joining the IMF, he taught at Harvard University and became chairman of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Economics Department in 1998.

After his departure, he will take up a position as a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

The IMF said the search process to identify a successor to Blanchard will begin right away. Endi