Asaf Savaş Akat (born 3 February 1943) is a Turkish economist and academic. He served as rector ofIstanbul Bilgi University from 1996 to 1998, where he remains a professor.[1]
Akat attended Levent Primary School inIstanbul beginning in 1954. In 1961, he studied atRedondo Union High School inRedondo Beach, California, and in 1962 continued his secondary education atGalatasaray High School in Istanbul. During his high school years, he played the saxophone in the bandKafadarlar, formed byBarış Manço. He completed his undergraduate and doctoral studies atIstanbul University and earned a master’s degree in economics from theUniversity of East Anglia in 1968.[2][3] He also undertook research studies at theLondon School of Economics.
He began his academic career in 1966 atIstanbul University Faculty of Economics, where he became a professor in 1980. In 1973, he became associate professor of economics at the same institution. During 1974–75, he was at National Security Academy, Istanbul, Turkey, as a member of teaching staff during military service. In 1980 he became professor of economics at Istanbul University. In 1982 he resigned from the Istanbul University Faculty of Economics.
In 1989, he was lecturer in economics at theMarmara University, Istanbul. In 1993, he was professor of economics at the Faculty of Economics of the Istanbul University. In 1994, he founded the academic board of theIstanbul School of International Studies. In 1996, he was the rector ofIstanbul Bilgi University. In 1998, he became Professor of Economics at Istanbul Bilgi University. Until 2009, Akat was one of the faces ofEkodiyalog, a popular television program on economics.[4]
In one of his November 2011 columns inVatan, titled asMonetary Politics and Financial Stability (in Turkish), Akat argued that developed countries led by the United States used to have a monopoly on economic theories and practises. Akat believes that the global crisis has changed this radically. Developing countries such as Turkey have begun to seize the initiative. “Thefatwa of one global financial centre no longer applies,” he wrote. In his interview withESI, Akat recalls the 1980s and 1990s when Turkey and its economy were not “on anyone’s map.” He talks about the Turkish economy’s “miraculous transformation” in the last decade, about the pro-business and fiscally conservative AKPgovernment, and the sustainability of the country’s economic growth.
He is married toNilüfer Göle a university professor and an authority on Muslim women’s issues.
He is the author of many publications and three books on economic issues. His latest,İktisadi Analiz (Economic Analysis), waspublished in 2009. In his paperThe Political Economy of Turkish Inflation (2005) heresearched inflation in Turkey in the 1980s and 1990s.
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