György Surányi (born January 3, 1954) is Hungarian economist the CEO and chairman of CIB Bank and former president of the Hungarian National Bank.
György Surányi | |
---|---|
Born | |
Alma mater | Corvinus University of Budapest |
Occupation(s) | Chairman, President & CEO at CIB Bank; regional head of Intesa Sanpaolo banking group |
Spouse | Dr Judit Marmoly |
Children | Szilvia Gábor |
Career
editSurányi has been president of the Hungarian national Bank between 1990–1991 and again in 1995-2001. In his second tenure as central banker from 1995 he played a role in the restoration of balance to the Hungarian economy and getting inflation under control. In the same period he co-authored the Bokros package, a series of measures cutting both the budget and current account deficits.[1] Surányi is also the regional head of Intesa Sanpaolo a banking group of Italy.[1] Under Surányi, the Hungarian Forint (HUF), became fully convertible for the first time.[2] In March 2009 his name was mentioned as a possible replacement for outgoing Prime Minister Ferenc Gyurcsány.[3][4] Hungarian political party SZDSZ announced that Surányi was acceptable to them as a candidate for Prime Minister.[5] Party leader Gábor Fodor said, Surányi is the one who could restore trust, and govern the country free of party influences.[6] Surányi was asked about his possible nomination and said that a new government will need clear support from all parliamentary parties "even if to a different degree".[7]
President of Hungary László Sólyom stated that instead of a short term transitional government ruling only until the 2010 elections, early elections should be held.[8] Surányi himself remained noncommittal declining to say whether he would accept the position of PM if nominated.[8] Hungarian political party Fidesz has said it will not support any new government including one led by Surányi. This not a personal problem, they support only a new, early parliamentary election.[8] Surányi became the frontrunner candidate for the post of prime minister; however, on 26 March he pulled out of the race, saying he would not take the job.[9]
The World Economic Forum titled him to Global Leader of Tomorrow, in 1993. In 1996, Euromoney named Surányi the central banker of the year in Central and Eastern Europe. Surányi reached the academic rank of full professor in 1998. He lectured at the Central European University.
Personal life
editHe is married. His wife is Dr Judit Marmoly. They have a daughter, Szilvia, and a son, Gábor.[10]
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b FACTBOX-Gyorgy Suranyi, frontrunner for Hungary PM
- ^ Q&A with Hungarian Banker Gyorgy Suranyi
- ^ Hungary: Outgoing PM names 3 possible successors
- ^ Hungary Socialists announce three PM candidates [permanent dead link]
- ^ Hungary Free Dems say would accept Suranyi as PM
- ^ SZDSZ backs György Surányi for PM
- ^ New gov't must have support of all parties, says PM favourite Suranyi[permanent dead link]
- ^ a b c Hungary's president favors early elections Archived 2012-02-29 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ SCENARIOS-What next as Hungary seeks new prime minister?
- ^ "Miniszterelnök jelöltek: Glatz, Surányi és Vértes – Ismerje meg őket! - zaol.hu". Archived from the original on 2017-12-01. Retrieved 2017-11-20.