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Stanford Stories From the Archives

Title:
Takeshi Amemiya : An Oral History
Author:
Amemiya, Takeshi and Thomas, Odette
Corporate Author:
Stanford Historical Society
Description:
In this oral history from , the noted econometrician Takeshi Amemiya, Edward Ames Edmonds Professor of Economics, Emeritus, describes his early life in wartime Japan, his education in economics, and his years on the faculty of the Department of Economics at Stanford University.

Takeshi amemiya biography of alberta Hirotsugu Akaike was a distinguished Japanese econometrician who made significant contributions to the field. Born in , Akaike completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Tokyo in He then pursued his graduate studies in the United States, where he obtained his master's degree from American University Washington in and his doctorate from Johns Hopkins University in Upon graduating, Akaike commenced his academic career at the Institute of Statistical Mathematics in Tokyo. He subsequently joined the faculty of Stanford University as a professor of statistics, where he remained until his retirement as an emeritus professor.

His wife, Yoshiko Miyaki Amemiya, briefly describes meeting Amemiya in Japan and her experience of life at Stanford. Amemiya begins by describing how Advanced Econometrics, a comprehensive text that is still in print three decades after its initial publication in , evolved from material he used to teach the subject when he first came to Stanford in About that time, Amemiya explains, microdata on individual households and companies began to become available.

Amemiya developed the statistical methods to analyze such data, and he was the first to write a textbook on the subject. Elaborating on his early years at Stanford, Amemiya explains that the faculty of the Department of Economics were assigned to different campus buildings, depending on their interests. He says this tended to deter collaboration until the department was consolidated at Encina Hall in the s.

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Amemiya jumps ahead to discuss his later interests: sharing his delight in discovering the similarities of Greek and Japanese customs, including the gods they worshipped and their shrines to the dead. In addition, after traveling in China, he began to write poetry in Chinese. Turning to his childhood, Amemiya says he was only seven at the outbreak of World War II, which found his family in Lima, Peru, where his father worked as an executive for a Japanese shipping line.

He describes being caught up in an exchange of Japanese and U.S. citizens living abroad at the outbreak of war.

Takeshi amemiya biography of alberta canada These volumes gather together a selection of autobiographical essays written by significant economists whose work is generally recognized to be at the forefront of the discipline as we enter the twenty-first century. The essays are largely based on introductions to volumes in the Edward Elgar series Economists of the Twentieth Century which collects together the key papers of these economists. This volume focuses on leading economists who were born, or have spent the greater part of their lives, in America. The main chapters are accompanied by an introduction in which the editors place the autobiographical essays in a wider context. Get Access or Sign In Register.

Although he was evacuated from Tokyo during the war, he experienced air raids in the area near Mount Fuji to which he had been sent. Amemiya describes his time at the International Christian University in Japan, Guilford College in North Carolina, and the American University in Washington, DC and admits to sometimes being distracted from his studies by American novels and golf.

At Johns Hopkins University, Amemiya says a connection with econometrist Carl F. Christ set him on a career course that led him to join the faculty of the Stanford Department of Economics. Stanford then was more comfortable and less pressured than today, Amemiya says, offering his criticism of today’s practice of allowing students to evaluate professors, arguing that this encourages overly rehearsed teaching.

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Amemiya, Takeshi was born on March 29, in Tokyo. Son of Kenji and Shizuko Amemiya. Bachelor, International Christian University, Master of Arts in Economics, American University, Doctor of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University,

Instead, he recalls putting new problems on the board and solving them with the students. Yoshiko Amemiya recounts how she met and married the young professor during a brief period when he left Stanford to teach in Japan. She also shares some of the challenges she experienced adapting to American culture, especially in feeling comfortable with the informality of the English language.

Amemiya concludes by briefly describing the anti-Vietnam War protests at Stanford and recalling some memorable faculty rivalries on the tennis court.

Topic:
Takeshi Amemiya, Stanford Historical Society, oral histories, interviews, higher education, professors, Stanford University--Department of Economics, econometrics, and Yoshiko Miyaki Amemiya
Publication Info:
cau
Collection:
Stanford Historical Society Oral History Program interviews, (inclusive)