Assistant Professor
National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies (GRIPS) |
7-22-1 Roppongi, Minato-ku |
Tokyo 106-8677, Japan |
Email: y-izumi (at) grips.ac.jp |
Research Interests
Historical Economics |
Political Economics |
Applied Microeconometrics |
Employment
2021 - present | Assistant Professor, National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies | |
2020 - 2022 | Project Researcher, The University of Tokyo |
Affiliations
2023 - present | Visiting Researcher, The University of Tokyo |
Education
2020 | Ph.D. in Economics, Northwestern University | |
2020 | M.A. in Economics, Northwestern University | |
2014 | M.A. in Economics, The University of Tokyo | |
2012 | B.A. in Economics, The University of Tokyo |
Publications
- “Golfing CEOs” with Masayuki Yagasaki and Hitoshi Shigeoka. Labor Economics, 91 (2024)
- “Exemption and Work Environment” with Daiji Kawaguchi, Sachiko Kuroda, and Taiga Tsubota. Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society. 00(0)1-42 (2024)
- “The effects of South Korean Protestantism on human capital and female empowerment, 1930–2010” with Sangyoon Park and Hyunjoo Yang. Journal of Comparative Economics, 51:2, 422-438 (2023)
- “Resource misallocation and aggregate productivity under progressive taxation” with Jang-Ting Guo and Yi-Chan Tsai. Journal of Macroeconomics, 60, 123-137 (2019)
Working Papers
- “Building Bureaucracy through Education: Evidence from Colonial Korea” with Sangyoon Park
- “CEO Gender Bias in the Formation of Firm-to-Firm Transactions” with Masayuki Yagasaki and Hitoshi Shigeoka. NBER Working Paper 31616
- “Education and Wartime Mobilization: Evidence from Colonial Korea” with Sangyoon Park
- “Building Business Resilience to Disasters: Evidence from Post-2011-Floods Thailand” with Hiroyuki Nakata, Yasuyuki Sawada, and Kunio Sekiguchi
- “Agrarian Contract and Peasant Protest: Evidence from Colonial Korea”
- “March from Markets: The Role of Periodic Markets in the March First Movement 1919”
- “Colonial Empire Building through Education: Rebellion and Education Provision in Colonial Korea”
Work in progress
- “Religion, Rebellion, and State Education: Evidence from Colonial Korea” with Sangyoon Park
- “Police Decentralization and Criminal Organizations: Evidence from Post-WWII Occupied Japan”