Mihai Tănăsescu
Mihai Nicolae Tănăsescu (born January 11, 1956) is a Romanian economist and politician.
Born in Bucharest, he graduated from the finance and accounting faculty of the Bucharest Academy of Economic Studies in 1978. From that year until 1983, he headed the accounting department at a Bucharest factory. From 1983 to 1990, he was an economist at the Finance Ministry. Following the Romanian Revolution, he remained at the ministry, heading a series of departments until 1997. From 1997 to 2000, he worked at the World Bank. From 2000 to 2004, he was Finance Minister in the Adrian Năstase cabinet. In 2002, he was made both a commander of the Legion of Honour and a knight of the Order of the Star of Romania.[1] In 2004, he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies on the lists of the Social Democratic Party; he served until May 2007, when he resigned. In the Chamber, he represented Argeș County, and was president of the budget and finance committee.[2] Following his resignation, he became Romania's representative at the International Monetary Fund.[3] In 2012, he was named a vice president of the European Investment Bank.[4]
He is married and has two children.[1]
Notes
- ^ a b (in Romanian) Curriculum vitae at the Romanian Chamber of Deputies site
- ^ (in Romanian) 2004-2008 profile at the Romanian Chamber of Deputies site
- ^ (in Romanian) "Tănăsescu a demisionat din Parlament, pentru a merge la FMI", Ziarul Financiar, May 29, 2007
- ^ (in Romanian) "Mihai Tănăsescu va fi numit vicepreşedinte al BEI", Ziarul Financiar, March 26, 2012
- v
- t
- e
- Adrian Năstase/Eugen Bejinariu
- Alexandru Athanasiu
- Ioan Rus
- Marian Săniuță
- Dan Ioan Popescu
- Ioan Talpeș
- Rodica Stănoiu/Cristian Diaconescu (Justice)
- Ioan Mircea Pașcu (Defense)
- Mihai Tănăsescu (Finance)
- Răzvan Theodorescu (Culture)
- Miron Mitrea (Public Works and Transport)
- Ilie Sârbu/Petre Daea (Agriculture)
- Daniela Bartoș/Mircea Beuran/Ionel Blănculescu/Ovidiu Brânzan (Health)
- Mircea Geoană (Foreign Affairs)
- Dan Ioan Popescu (Economy and Commerce)
- Marian Sârbu/Elena Dumitru/Dan Mircea Popescu (Labor)
- Dan Nica/Silvia Adriana Țicău (Communications)
- Aurel-Constantin Ilie/Petru Lificiu/Ilie Sârbu/Speranța Ianculescu (Environment)
- Șerban Mihăilescu/Eugen Bejinariu (Coordinating the General Secretariat of the Government)
- Ioan Rus/Marian Săniuță (Interior)
- Ecaterina Andronescu/ Alexandru Athanasiu (Education)
- Hildegard Puwak/Vasile Pușcaș/Alexandru Fărcaș (European Integration)
- Vasile Dîncu (Public Information)
- Octav Cozmâncă (Public Administration)
- Acsinte Gaspar (Relation with Parliament)
- Silvia Ciornei (Small and Medium Enterprises)
- Georgiu Gingăraș (Youth and Sport)
- Matei-Agathon Dan (Tourism)
- Gabriel Oprea/Gheorghe Emacu (Public Administration)
- Eugen Dijmărescu/Vasile Radu (Commerce)
- Acsinte Gaspar/Șerban Nicolae (Relation with Parliament)
- Vasile Pușcaș (Chief Negotiator with the EU)
- Ovidiu Mușetescu (Authority for Privatization)
- Ionel Blănculescu (Coordinating Control Bodies)
- Marian Sârbu/Bogdan Niculescu-Duvăz (Relation with Social Partners)
- Șerban Valeca (Research Activity)
- PDSR/PSD minister
- PSDR minister (merged into the PSD in 2001)
- PUR minister