Božidar Đelić

Božidar Đelić (born on April 1st 1965 with Belgrade) [[Cyrillic] БожидарЂелић] is an economist and Serb politician member of the Democratic party of the Serb president Boris Tadić. Đelić has also French nationality.

Đelić is graduate of High studies commercial, of the Institut of political studies of Paris and holder of a MBA of the Harvard Business School, of a MPA of the Kennedy School off Government and of a diploma in economy of the École of the high studies in social sciences.

It was used for to advise with the governments Polish (1991 - 1992) and Russian (1992 - 1993) on privatizations and the reform of the banking system. He advised the Rumanian Prime Minister Victor Ciorbea on the macroeconomic reforms to be undertaken in Romania in 1996.

Đelić also worked like " partenaire" for the consultancy McKinsey & Company with Paris and in the Silicon Valley between 1993 and 2000. Đelić was specialized in the media and the financial institutions.

Đelić was and Saving Minister for Finance in Zoran Djindjić of 2001 with 2004. It returns then in the bank by joining the Agricultural credit.

At the legislative elections of January 2007, the Serb Radical party arrives at the head but announces not to want to form government. It is thus the Democratic party which is charged by president Tadić with composing a government. The negotiations with the G17+ and the Democratic party of Serbia to form a coalition government are difficult and Đelić must yield its place of applicant to the post of Prime Minister with Vojislav Koštunica of the democratic party of Serbia. President Tadić and Koštunica find an agreement: Koštunica is Prime Minister and the democratic party obtains the majority of the ministerial positions. Đelić becomes in May 2007 vice-president of the government in load of integration in the European Union.

External bond

  • Personal site

Reference

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