•      Fri Dec 27 2024
Logo

Asian Development Bank president Nakao to step down



FILE – In this Jan. 12, 2018, file photo, Asian Development Bank (ADB) President Takehiko Nakao gestures during a forum with foreign correspondents at the bank’s headquarters in Manila, Philippines. The regional lender announced Nakao’s plan to resign on Tuesday, Sept. 17, 2019. Japanese officials have usually headed the ADB, and Finance Minister Taro Aso said Tokyo would nominate a “high-caliber candidate” as Nakao’s successor. (AP Photo/Bullit Marquez, File)

TOKYO, Sep 17 (AP) — The president of the Asian Development Bank, Takehiko Nakao, plans to step down early next year, the regional lender said Tuesday.

Japan has usually headed the ADB as a top donor. Finance Minister Taro Aso said in a statement that Tokyo would soon nominate a “high-caliber candidate” as Nakao’s successor.

Aso said the government planned to recommend Masatsugu Asakawa, a former vice finance minister, as Tokyo’s choice as “best qualified” for the job.

Nakao, 63, will leave on Jan. 16, 2020. He took the ADB post in 2013 when his predecessor Haruhiko Kuroda was named Bank of Japan governor. He was re-elected to a second five-year term in 2016.

He said he was leaving to make way for someone with “fresh ideas.”

Asakawa, 61, was Japan’s top currency official for four years before becoming a government adviser in July.

The Japanese financial newspaper Nikkei cited officials expressing concern China might challenge Tokyo’s hold over the Manila, Philippines-based bank, which it has headed since its 1966 founding.

The bank said in a statement that “The election for the new president will be in accordance with the open, transparent and merit-based procedure.”