Ministerio de Economía y Finanzas Públicas | |
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1826 |
Jurisdiction | Government of Bolivia |
Headquarters | Av. Mariscal Santa Cruz, in the corner of Calle Loayza, La Paz |
Agency executive | |
Website | Official website |
Politics of Bolivia |
---|
Constitution |
Executive |
Legislative |
Judiciary |
Elections
|
Administrative divisions |
Foreign relations
|
Bolivia portal |
The Ministry of Economy and Public Finance (Spanish: Ministerio de Economía y Finanzas Públicas) is a cabinet ministry of the government of Bolivia responsible for overseeing the nation's public finances and responsible for formulating and implementing macroeconomic policies that preserve stability and promote economic and social equity.
Ministers of Finance
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. (March 2022) |
- Alberto Crespo Gutiérrez, 1941– ?
- Víctor Paz Estenssoro, c. 1943–1946
- Edmundo Valencia Ibanez, 1969–1970
- Antonio Sánchez de Lozada, 1970
- Flavio Machicado Saravia, 1970–1971
- Raúl Lema Peláez, 1971
- Edwin Rodríguez Aguirre, 1971–1972
- Luis Bedregal Rodo, 1972–1973
- Armando Pinell Centellas, 1973
- Jaime Quiroga Mattos, 1973–1974
- Victor Castillo Suárez, 1974–1976
- Carlos Calvo Galindo, 1976–1977
- David Blanco Zabala, 1977–1978
- Jorge Tamayo Ramos, 1978
- Wenceslao Albo Quiroz, 1978–1979
- Guido Hinojosa Cardozo, 1979
- Javier Alcoreza Melgarejo, 1979
- Agapito Feliciano Monzon, 1979
- Augusto Cuádros Sánchez, 1979–1980
- Adolfo Aramayo Anze, 1980
- José Sánchez Calderón, 1980–1981
- Jorge Tamayo Ramos, 1981
- Javier Alcoreza Melgarejo, 1981–1982
- Lucio Paz Rivero, 1982
- Alfonso Revollo Tennier, 1982
- Ernesto Araníbar Quiroga, 1982–1983
- Flavio Machicado Saravia, 1983
- Fernando Baptista Gumucio, 1983–1984
- Flavio Machicado Saravia, 1984
- Oscar Bonifaz Gutiérrez, 1984
- Gualbero Mercado Rodríguez, 1984–1985
- Francisco Belmonte Cortez, 1985
- Roberto Gisbert Bermudez, 1985–1986
- Juan Cariaga, 1986–1988
- Ramiro Cabezas, 1988–1989
- David Blanco Zabala, 1989–1992
- Jorge Quiroga Ramírez, 1992–1993
- Juan Pablo Zegarra Arana, 1993
- Fernando Illanes de la Riva, 1993–1994
- Fernando Cossío, 1994–1995
- Juan Candia Castillo, 1995–1997
- Edgar Millares, 1997–1998
- Herbert Müller Costas, 1998–2000
- Ronald MacLean Abaroa, 2000
- José Luis Lupo Flores, 2000–2001
- Jacques Trigo Loubiere, 2001–2002
- Javier Comboni Salinas, 2002–2003
- Javier Cuevas Argote, 2003–2005
- Luis Carlos Jemio, 2005
- Waldo Gutiérrez Iriarte, 2005–2006
- Luis Arce, 2006–2017
- Mario Guillén, 2017–2019
- Luis Arce, 2019
- José Luis Parada Rivero, 2019–2020
- Óscar Ortiz Antelo, 2020
- Branko Marinković, 2020
- Marcelo Alejandro Montenegro Gómez García, 2020–
See also
References
- "Información Institucional". June 20, 2009. Archived from the original on 2009-06-20.
- "Home - Bobim". 2023-09-07. Archived from the original on 2023-10-31. Retrieved 2023-09-18.
- Estenssoro, Hugo (2001-06-11). "Obituary: Víctor Paz Estenssoro". the Guardian. Retrieved 2022-03-23.
- ^ "30 años de democracia en Bolivia – Repaso multidisciplinario a un proceso apasionante (1982–2012)" (PDF). Bibliothek der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung.
- ^ "Electoral Rules and the Transformation of Bolivian Politics: The Rise of Evo Morales – PDF Free Download". epdf.pub.
- ^ "Globalisation and the reform of the Bolivian state, 1985–2005" (PDF). CORE.
- http://pubdocs.worldbank.org/en/918571541108839939/MIGAGovernors.pdf
- "Revisa la lista de los nuevos ministros de Bolivia". Correo del Sur.
External links
This article about government in Bolivia is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it. |