
Title: Chief Economist
As FAO’s Chief Economist, Dr. Torero leads FAO's work with governments and partners to build resilient, inclusive, and sustainable agrifood systems. He focuses on strengthening shock resilience, advancing innovative financing, improving access to healthy diets, and reinforcing supply chains. His work is grounded in decades of research on commodity prices, market volatility, and their effects on poverty and hunger. Dr. Torero directs FAO’s economic policy engagement in global SDG processes, especially Zero Hunger, and serves as the organization’s analytical voice at high-level forums. He also provides intellectual leadership for FAO’s flagship reports, including The State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World.
Before joining FAO in 2019, Dr. Torero was Executive Director at the World Bank Group, representing six Latin American countries. Before that he led the Markets, Trade and Institutions Division at the International Food Policy Research Institute, where he oversaw major research and impact evaluations, including the Millennium Challenge Corporation’s $450 million investment in El Salvador’s infrastructure and rural electrification.
He has published over 40 peer-reviewed articles and co-authored 14 books on poverty, inequality, and behavioral economics. His research examines how infrastructure, institutions, and technology influence poverty reduction and market connectivity.
He has received a number of awards for his contributions, including the Chevalier dans l’Ordre du Mérite Agricole from France and two Global Development Network awards. His work has been featured by major international media, and his op-eds have appeared in Foreign Policy, Project Syndicate, and Los Angeles Times. He holds a Ph.D. in economics from UCLA and a B.A. from the University of the Pacific, Peru.
For more information, visit: https://maximotorero.com/.
The coronavirus pandemic has been a crushing one-two punch to the global economy, delivering a dual shock to supply and demand in quick succession. It’s a serious threat to food...
Countries must join forces to avert a global food crisis from COVID-19.
Trade restrictions are breaking supply chains, and coronavirus lockdowns are preventing laborers from working on farms. Countries need to step back and stop panicking. (Photo by Annie Spratt on Unsplash)...
Producing food, even on organic farms, and then not eating it only green-washes its truly ravaging effects on the planet.
Máximo Torero: "That food is a business is not bad, what is bad is that it is speculated on"
Countries must resist the urge to panic because trade restrictions and hoarding will only intensify the crisis and disrupt supply chains
COVID-19 risk to food-chain supply in Africa with Maximo Torero, Chief Economist, FAO