Eduardo Carriles Explained

Office:Minister of Finance
Primeminister:Adolfo Suárez
Term Start:7 July 1976
Term End:4 July 1977
Birth Date:28 November 1923
Birth Place:Santander, Spain
Death Place:Madrid, Spain
Party:Unión Democrática Española
Nationality:Spanish
Children:8

Eduardo Carriles (1923–2020) was a Spanish lawyer, businessman and politician who served as the minister of finance between 1976 and 1977.

Biography

Carriles was born in Santander on 28 November 1923.[1] He was a lawyer by profession.[1] He served as the general secretary of a company, Aeronáutica Industrial, and director of various other companies.[1] Carriles was part of the reformist Tácito group, but he left the group with others to establish the Unión Democrática Española.[2]

Carriles was part of the Unión when he was appointed minister of finance to the cabinet led by Adolfo Suárez on 7 July 1976.[1] [3] In the cabinet Carriles and other ministers, including Leopoldo Calvo Sotelo, Andrés Reguera, Landelino Lavilla, Enrique de la Mata, Marcelino Oreja and Alfonso Osorio, were called Tácito group due to their previous involvement in the movement.[4] Like previous finance ministers Carriles could not manage to reduce economic crisis experienced in Spain in the period 1973–1977.[5] His term as minister of finance ended on 4 July 1977.

Carriles married Carola Díaz de Bustamante in 1950, and they had eight children.[1] He was the recipient of Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Charles III. He died on 12 January 2020.[6] The funeral was held in the Church of San Francisco de Borja, Madrid, on 6 February.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: Eduardo Carriles Galarraga. 27 October 2021. El Pais. 7 July 1976. es.
  2. Book: Charles T. Powell. Frances Lannon. Paul Preston. Élites and Power in Twentieth-Century Spain. 1990. Clarendon Press. Oxford. 978-0198228806. 265–266. The "Tacito" group and the transition to democracy, 1973-1977.
  3. News: Harry Debelius. No political shadings among members of Spain's new Cabinet . 11 December 2023. The Times. 59750. 8 July 1976. Madrid.
  4. Maria Cristina Palomares. The quest for survival after Franco: The moderate Francoists' slow journey to the polls (1964-1977). London School of Economics. 15 July 2021. 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20210715014005/http://etheses.lse.ac.uk/2780/. 296. PhD.
  5. Book: Joseph Harrison. David Corkill. Spain: A Modern European Economy. Routledge. 2016. 978-1-317-05167-1. 14. London; New York.
  6. News: Además fue Abogado del Estado y ministro de Hacienda en el Gobierno de Adolfo Suárez. 27 October 2021. Cope. 17 January 2020.