Mateusz Szczurek | |
Office: | Minister of Finance |
Primeminister: | Donald Tusk Ewa Kopacz |
Term Start: | 27 November 2013 |
Term End: | 16 November 2015 |
Predecessor: | Jacek Rostowski |
Successor: | Paweł Szałamacha |
Birth Date: | 11 August 1975 |
Birth Place: | Warsaw, Poland |
Party: | Civic Platform |
Alma Mater: | University of Warsaw Columbia University University of Sussex |
Mateusz Szczurek (born 11 August 1975 in Warsaw, Poland) is a Polish economist and politician. He was the Polish Minister of Finance in the governments of successive prime ministers Donald Tusk and Ewa Kopacz from 2013 to 2015.[1] [2]
Szczurek studied at the University of Warsaw and University of Sussex where in 1998 he obtained a master's degree, and in 2005 a PhD. He wrote his Masters thesis on "Chaos and non-linearity in Foreign Exchange Markets."[3]
In 1997 Szczurek was an economist for ING Bank.[4] In 2011 he became the Chief Economist of ING Group for Central Europe and Eastern Europe. He was chief (2003-2005) and co-founder Towarzystwo Absolwentów Uniwersytetów Brytyjskich (Alumni Association of British Universities). He is a member of Association of Polish Economists.
On 27 November 2013, the President of Poland appointed Szczurek as Minister of Finance.
During his time in office, Szczurek phased out Poland's flexible credit line (FCL) with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).[5]
In 2014, Szczurek called for the creation of a European Fund for Investments – a special-purpose vehicle under the umbrella of the European Investment Bank – that would be able to finance, through leveraging its own capital, 700 billion euros (US$906.4 billion) worth of investment, to revive the European economy.[6] In 2015, he announced that Polish state development bank BGK and its investment vehicle PIR would invest up to 8 billion euros ($8.5 billion) in projects linked to the European Fund for Strategic Investments (EFSI).[7]
Also in 2015, Szczurek put aside funds the country’s budget for the repatriation – including housing, Polish language lessons and professional training – of tens of thousands of ethnic Poles living in Kazakhstan, Ukraine and other former Soviet republics.[8]
Since leaving office, Szczurek has been teaching public finance and international economics at University of Warsaw. He also serves as Associate Director, Lead Regional Economist in the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD), monitoring structural reforms and policy dialogue in Central Europe and the Baltics region.
In October 2016, Szczurek was appointed to the five-member European Fiscal Board, an independent advisory board of the European Commission on fiscal matters.[9]
Szczurek was named European Finance Minister of the Year in January 2015 by The Banker magazine.,[11] and Finance Minister of the Year Central & Eastern Europe 2014 by Emerging Markets magazine.[12]
Szczurek has five children.[13]