Short Biography
James Poterba is the Mitsui Professor of Economics. He is also the President of the National Bureau of Economic Research
and a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the
Econometric Society. He is Vice-President of the National Tax Association. He has served as a Director of the American
Finance Association and as a member of the Executive Committee of the
American Economic Association.
Dr. Poterba's research focuses on how taxation affects the
economic decisions of households and firms. His recent work has
emphasized the effect of taxation on the financial behavior of
households, particularly their saving and portfolio decisions. He has
been especially interested in the analysis of tax-deferred retirement
saving programs such as 401(k) plans and in the role of annuities in
financing retirement consumption.
Dr. Poterba served as a member of the President's Advisory
Panel on Federal Tax Reform in 2005. He is a trustee of the College Retirement
Equity Fund (CREF), and a former member of the MIT 401(k) Plan
Oversight Committee.
He edited the Journal of Public Economics, the leading international
journal for research on taxation and government spending, between 1997
and 2006. He is a member of the advisory board of the Journal of Wealth
Management. He is a co-author of The Role of Annuity Markets in
Financing Retirement (2001), and an editor or co-editor of Global
Warming: Economic Policy Responses (1991), International Comparisons of
Household Saving (1994), Empirical Foundations of Household Taxation
(1996), Fiscal Institutions and Fiscal Performance (1999), and Fiscal
Reform in Columbia (2005).
Dr. Poterba studied Economics as an undergraduate at Harvard, and
received the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Economics from Oxford
University, where he was a Marshall Scholar. He has been an Alfred P.
Sloan Foundation Fellow, a Batterymarch Fellow, a Fellow at the Center
for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences, and a Distinguished Visiting
Fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.