Video On Demand

Womenomics: Why it Matters for Japan and the World

September 23, 2014 • 9:00 am – 1:00 pm EDT

Increasing female labor participation not only economically and politically empowers women, it also has the potential to substantially increase economic productivity. This is an especially critical issue in Japan where getting more women into the workforce could result in GDP gains of up to 13 percent and help to offset losses caused by the country’s demographic decline. Cooperation and coordination between Japan and the United States could also help to economically empower women elsewhere around the world, especially in developing countries where the potential economic gains are most significant. While increased female labor participation presents a significant opportunity, the structural and social hurdles are enormous – and it is not clear that policy initiatives currently underway in Japan and elsewhere can surmount them. Join the CSIS Simon Chair for a major event on this important topic featuring government officials, NGOs, private sector representatives.

The CSIS Simon Chair in Political Economy and the Asia Foundation invite you to,

Womenomics: Why it Matters for Japan and the World

Tuesday, September 23, 2014
9:00 am - 1:00 pm
2nd Floor Conference Room
CSIS, 1616 Rhode Island Ave. N.W.

Please RSVP to simon.chair@csis.org

AGENDA

8:30 am Registration. Light breakfast will be available.

9:00 am Welcoming Remarks

Matthew P. Goodman
William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, CSIS

9:05 am Opening Remarks

Wendy Cutler
Acting Deputy U.S. Trade Representative

9:30 am Panel 1: U.S.-Japan Cooperation on Women’s Economic Empowerment in 3rd Countries

Yumiko Tanaka
Senior Advisor on Gender and Development, Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA)

Cathy Cozzarelli
Senior Gender Adviser for Policy, Planning and Learning, United States Agency for International Development (USAID)

Eileen Pennington
Associate Director, Women’s Empowerment Program, Asia Foundation

Amy Studdart (moderator)
Deputy Director & Fellow, William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, CSIS

10:45 am Break

11:00 am Panel 2: Why Women’s Participation in the Japanese Workforce is Critical

Chad Steinberg
Senior Economist, International Monetary Fund

Rui Matsukawa
Director, Gender Mainstreaming Division, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Japan

Miko Oyama
U.S. Representative, KEIDANREN

Robert Feldman
Managing Director, Morgan Stanley

Matthew P. Goodman (moderator)
William E. Simon Chair in Political Economy, CSIS

12:15 pm Luncheon

12:30 pm Keynote Remarks

Akie Abe (invited)
First Lady of Japan

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Matthew P. Goodman

Matthew P. Goodman

Former Senior Vice President for Economics