Hernán BüchiHernán Alberto Büchi Buc (Latin American Spanish: [eɾˈnan alˈβeɾto ˈβixi ˈβuk]; born March 6, 1949) is a Chilean economist who served as minister of finance of the Pinochet government. In 1989 he ran unsuccessfully for president with support of Chilean right-wing parties.[1] Early lifeBüchi was born into a Roman Catholic family of Swiss, German and Croatian descent who settled in Iquique. He studied at Instituto Nacional General José Miguel Carrera of Santiago. After receiving a diploma in mining at the University of Chile he went to the U.S. and earned an MBA from Columbia University in 1975. Despite this fact, he is often mentioned together with the Chicago Boys who studied economics at the University of Chicago, because he represents similar neoliberal market positions. In 1975, Hernán Büchi began as a consultant of the Secretary of Economics, Pablo Baraona, and as a chair of the board of directors of the state-owned sugar refiner Industria Azucarera Nacional. In 1978, he joined the board of the state-owned telephone company Compañía de Teléfonos. Career under PinochetIn 1979 he became Vice-Secretary of Economics (1979–1980) for the ministry of treasury. He worked with the Minister for Labor and Social Security José Piñera, who started the private pension system in Chile. In 1981 he was appointed Vice-Secretary of Health (1980–1983) where he prepared the privatization of health insurance. During the 1983 / 1984 recession in Chile he became Minister of Planning (1983–1984) (ODEPLAN) and Superintendent of Banks and Financial Institutions (1984–1985). He was Minister of Finance (the Treasury) between 1985 and 1989[2] and returned to the principles of monetarism. Büchi's appointment as finance minister, according to British historian Edwin Williamson:
After Pinochet stepped down in 1990, Büchi founded the "Liberty and Development Institute" (Libertad y Desarrollo), where he currently is the chairman of the "International Economy Center Council" and a consultant. It has been funded by The Tinker Foundation, Atlas Economic Research Foundation, Center for International Private Enterprise, and the German Hanns Seidel Foundation per its website.[4] Since 1990 he has been an adviser in several government bodies in Latin America, Eastern Europe and Asia. He has been a chairman and/or member of the board of several public companies.[5] Presidential Candidate 1989During the 1989 Chilean presidential election Büchi stood for the right-wing Democracy and Progress Party and Unión Demócrata Independiente but was also supported by Renovación Nacional and Democracia Radical. Büchi's campaign hired a former public relations adviser to former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, Timothy Bell.[6] Büchi came in second with 2,051,975 votes (29.40%) after Patricio Aylwin with 55.2%. However he "received more support from women than men in 59 of the 60 electoral districts, the exception being in southernmost district of Magallanes, where his support was about equal between the sexes".[7] 1994 until presentSince 1994 Büchi has been the chair of the board of directors the Chilean food company Lucchetti, which was owned by the late Andrónico Luksic and his Luksic group, Chile's first multinational corporation, where Büchi holds further positions. Lucchetti was acquired by Tresmontes, and Tresmontes Lucchetti S.A. was bought by Grupo Nutresa S.A. in October 2013.[8] Büchi has also been chair of the board of directors of the Chilean Mining Company,[9] an advisor to the board of directors of Banco de Chile since 2008, with an annual compensation of 79,900,000 CLP (2014 USD 143,000),[10] a chairman of the Directive Council of Universidad del Desarrollo, and Adviser to the Instituto Libertad y Desarrollo. He has acted as member of the board of directors of the large holding company Quiñenco S.A.[citation needed] and Consorcio Nacional de Seguros, which is a large Chilean insurance company, and Falabella S.A.[11] BooksIn 1993, Büchi detailed his experience as Minister of the Treasury of Chile during 1985–1989, in a book called "The Economic Transformation of Chile: A Personal Account", where he discusses the liberalization of the Chilean economy, and the role he played in it. It was translated into English in 2009. See alsoNotes
External links
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