(Redirected from Angel Gurria)'José Ángel Gurría Treviño' (
May 8 1950,
Tampico,
Tamaulipas) is a
Mexican economist and diplomat. He is the current secretary general of the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) since
1 June 2006.
Gurría graduated with a bachelor's degree in Economics from the
National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) and undertook postgraduate studies at the
University of Leeds, in the
United Kingdom and at
Harvard University, in the
United States. He served as
Secretary of Foreign Affairs (
1994 –
1999) and as
Secretary of Finance (
1999 –
2000) in the
Ernesto Zedillo administration. In Foreign Affairs he opposed the
Helms-Burton Act and in Treasury he restructured the foreign debt. He also negotiaged the
NAFTA and requested financial aid during the
1994 crisis.
Gurría has also been President and
CEO of the National Development Bank (''Nafin'') of Mexico and President and CEO of the Foreign Trade Bank (''Bancomext''). From
2003 to
2005 he was a chair member of the
Inter-American Development Bank's External Advisory Group.
He was the architect of the economic stabilization of the economy, partially by cutting government spending six times during the Zedillo administration. The effect of his work has been felt during
Vicente Fox's administration who nominated him to lead the
OECD in
July 2005.
Gurría speaks six languages:
Spanish,
French,
English,
Portuguese,
Italian and
German.
External links
★
Secretary-General page on the
OECD web site and
Observer.
★
Mexican Council for Economic and Social Development
★
Profile at The
Centre for International Governance Innovation site (CIGI).
★
Gurría is a candidate to lead the
OECD.
★
Secretariat of Foreign Affairs.