Nika Gilauri Explained

Nika Gilauri
Office:8th Prime Minister of Georgia
President:Mikheil Saakashvili
Term Start:6 February 2009
Term End:4 July 2012
Predecessor:Grigol Mgaloblishvili
Successor:Vano Merabishvili
Office1:First Deputy Prime Minister of Georgia
President1:Mikheil Saakashvili
Term Start1:December 2008
Term End1:6 February 2009
Predecessor1:position established
Successor1:David Tkeshelashvili
Office2:Minister of Finance
President2:Mikheil Saakashvili
Term Start2:7 September 2007
Term End2:6 February 2009
Predecessor2:Aleksi Aleksishvili
Successor2:Kakha Baindurashvili
Office3:Minister of Energy
President3:Mikheil Saakashvili
Term Start3:17 February 2004
Term End3:7 September 2007
Predecessor3:David Mirtskhulava
Successor3:Alexander Khetaguri
Birth Date:14 February 1975
Birth Place:Tbilisi, Georgian SSR, Soviet Union
Party:Independent
Alma Mater:Tbilisi State University
University of Limerick
Temple University
Signature:Nika Gilauri signature (vect).svg
Native Name Lang:ka

Nikoloz "Nika" Gilauri (Georgian: ნიკოლოზ [ნიკა] გილაური, in Georgian pronounced as /nikʼa ɡilauɾi/; born 14 February 1975) is a Georgian politician who was 8th Prime Minister of Georgia from 6 February 2009 to 30 June 2012. He had served as Minister for Energy (2004–2007) and Minister for Finance (2007–2009) and First Vice Prime Minister in the Cabinet of Georgia (2008–2009).

In 2012, he was appointed as the head of the JSC Partnership Fund, a state-owned stock fund. Currently Gilauri set his advisory boutique for public sector decision makers. He is also a senior advisor at McKinsey and Co.

Education and early career

Nika Gilauri was born in 1975 in Tbilisi. He graduated from the University of Limerick (Ireland), with degree in Bachelor of Business Studies in Economics and Finance and later gained an MBA in International Business Management from Temple University, Philadelphia.

Before joining the government of Georgia, Gilauri worked as a financial controller at ESBI Georgia, which was a management contractor for Georgian State Electosystems and Iberdrola Georgia, which was management contractor for Electricity Systems Commercial Operator of Georgia.

In the government

Gilauri joined the government of Georgia in 2004 as a Minister of Energy and spearheaded reforms in the energy sector, turning the country from blacked out state into the net electricity exporter, eradicating corruption, introducing new legislation, new market rules and new tariff methodologies. He also led energy sector negotiations with Gazprom, SOCAR, Inter RAO and other large energy companies resulting in Georgia becoming one of the most energy secured countries in the region.

As a Minister of Finance, Gilauri undertook anticorruption reforms in customs services introducing innovative measures to improve services and eradicating any non-transparent actions. Also, he led the new Tax Code reform simplifying the rules, minimizing any double interpretation possibilities, and creating a fair ground for entrepreneurs and investors, resulting in introducing of the new Tax Code in 2009. One of the most important moves as a Minister of Finance for Nika was reducing tax rate (income tax from 20% to 15%) in the beginning of 2009, in the midst of the world financial crises when everybody adopted austerity measures and advised to do the same to the government of Georgia. The move worked well for the country being the first to recover form recession reaching 6,4% growth rate in 2010.

In February 2009, Gilauri succeeded Grigol Mgaloblishvili as Georgian Prime Minister. Due to difficult economic situation (growth rate was –9%) he was primary charged with economic recovery program and improvement of business climate in the country. In Q2 2012 (when Gilauri retired from the PM position) Georgia's economic growth rate was above +8% and Georgia was Ranked 9th worldwide by the World Bank's Easy to Do Business Report (up from 112th in 2006). As PM Gilauri also led healthcare reforms resulting in constructing (by private sector) more than 100 new hospitals around the country within two years time; education reforms creating healthy and sustainable competition in secondary as well as tertiary education systems. He also led EU-Georgia FTA agreement negotiations as well as EU – Georgia Association Agreement negotiations.

Later career

After his retirement from the government, Gilauri established, in 2012, the independent advisory firm Reformatics, which has worked with more than 20 governments around the world.[1]

Personal life

Nika Gilauri married in January 2010 the former Georgian fashion model Marine Shamugia, a Sukhumi native and a member of the beauty contest Miss Georgia–2004.[2] [3]

External links

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Notes and References

  1. News: Kvanchilashvili . Elene . The Reform Ambassador . 17 January 2019 . Forbes Georgia . 24 January 2018.
  2. http://en.trend.az/search/?str=Marine%2BShamugia&m=a Georgian PM gets married
  3. http://www.idfi.ge/uploadedFiles/files/deklaraciebi%202011/mtavroba/premierministri-gilauri.pdf ნიკა გილაური: თანამდებობის პირის ქონებრივი მდგომარეობის დეკლარაცია (Nika Gulauri: Asset Declaration)