Ministry of the Presidency (Peru) explained

The Ministry of the Presidency (Spanish; Castilian: Ministerio de la Presidencia, MIPRE)[1] was a government ministry of the Peruvian government. Created through Law N° 24297 on July 28, 1985, its function was to regulate and coordinate the operation of multisectoral entities and decentralized public organizations of the central government. It was deactivated in 2002.

History

The ministry was created in 1985, during the first presidency of Alan García.[2] [3] Originally deactivated in 1990, it was again reactivated on May 10, 1992.[2] [4] Under the government of Alberto Fujimori, it became the most powerful ministry in the country, with around 30% of the government's budget directed at its funding.[1] [3] It was deactivated again in 2002.[2]

Agencies attached to the Ministry

In 1992, the following agencies were attached to the ministry:[5]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Straface, Fernando . La Reforma del Estado en Perú . Banco Interamericano de Desarrollo; Departamento de Desarrollo Sostenible; División de Estado, Gobernabilidad y Sociedad Civil . 2006 . 10–11 . es . Basco . Ana Inés.
  2. News: El peso de la cartera . 2021-02-15 . . Instituto Peruano de Economía.
  3. Book: Blondet M., Cecilia . El encanto del dictador: mujeres y política en la década de Fujimori . Instituto de Estudios Peruanos . 2002 . 9972-51-065-4 . 13 . es . 1019-4479.
  4. Web site: Fundamentos . Congreso de la República.
  5. Web site: Ley Orgánica del Ministerio de la Presidencia (Decreto Ley 25556) . 1992-06-11 . Superintendencia Nacional de Bienes Estatales.