Consulting Okamoto began his career as a consultant for
KPMG in 2008. He worked with clients in the financial services, asset management, technology, and healthcare sectors on matters related to regulatory compliance, risk management, and operational efficiency.
Congressional aide While completing graduate studies at Georgetown University, Okamoto was hired by
John Campbell in 2011 to serve as his advisor on financial services and other economic-related matters. In 2013, he was appointed policy director for monetary policy and trade for the
House Financial Services Committee. While policy director, he worked to force conditions on additional funds the Obama administration sought for the International Monetary Fund. This included a restoration of key rules governing very large loans which had been removed to allow
IMF lending to Greece. Ultimately, the IMF amended its rules and Congress allowed the funding provision to pass. In 2014, he was hired by
Pat Toomey to serve as his chief advisor for the
Senate Banking Committee. When Republicans regained the majority in the Senate in 2016, Okamoto became the majority staff director for the Senate Banking Subcommittee on Financial Institutions.
U.S. Department of the Treasury In November 2016, Okamoto was recruited onto the
transition team for
Donald Trump working on the Treasury Department's landing team, focussing on international economics and domestic finance. In 2017, the President appointed him deputy assistant secretary of the Treasury within the Office of International Affairs, with responsibilities over
international financial institutions and sovereign debt matters. He launched the Women Entrepreneurs Finance Initiative, a key priority
Ivanka Trump, and currently serves as chairman of its Governing Committee. Upon the administration withdrawing its initial nominee for assistant secretary, Okamoto was elevated to serve, on an acting basis, as assistant secretary for international finance and development. Okamoto was responsible for several divisions with responsibilities for regional and bilateral economic engagement, international economic coordination through the
G7 and
G20, international monetary affairs, and executing U.S. participation in international financial institutions. He was never confirmed by
the United States Congress. Okamoto represented the United States on the board of the
World Bank's Global Environment Facility. He has been active in assisting governments with economic reform, including Argentina, Haiti, Jordan, Latvia, Somalia, and Ukraine. Okamoto also held concurrent appointments by President Trump to be Acting Governor of the
European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the
African Development Bank, and the
African Development Fund. File:Secretary Pompeo Delivers Remarks at the Millennium Challenge Corporation Board Meeting (49194973013).jpg|Okamoto (center), in his capacity as acting Assistant Secretary for International Finance and Development, at a board meeting of the
Millennium Challenge Corporation in 2019
IMF IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva nominated Okamoto to serve as her Deputy on March 12, 2020. Ms. Georgieva came to know Mr. Okamoto during his time at Treasury through his engagement with the IMF and World Bank. In her endorsement, Ms. Georgieva cited Okamoto's role to help bolster and preserve the IMF's lending envelope during the previous two IMF resource reviews. At the IMF, Okamoto has called for debt relief for poorer countries suffering the economic harm resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. On April 12, 2021, Okamoto set a goal of distributing a $650 billion allocation of Special Drawing Rights monetary reserves to member countries by the summer of 2021. == References ==