Caio Koch-Weser
Caio Koch-Weser at the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting in 2012
Born
Caio Kai Koch-Weser

(1944-07-25) July 25, 1944
NationalityGerman
CitizenshipGermany
Occupation(s)Businessman
Economist
Civil Servant
TitleVice Chairman of Deutsche Bank
SpouseMaritta Rogalla von Bieberstein
Children3

Caio Kai Koch-Weser (born July 25, 1944 in Rolândia, Brazil) is a German economist, civil servant and business executive. He was Secretary of State in the Federal Ministry of Finance 1999–2005. Prior to becoming Secretary of State, he served in the World Bank in a number of positions for 26 years, from 1991–1999 as Vice President and from 1996–1999 as Managing Director of Operations. He is now a Vice Chairman and senior adviser with Deutsche Bank.[1]

Early life

Koch-Weser was born and grew up in Brazil, since his parents and grandparents had left Germany due to the rise of Nazism. He is the grandson of liberal politician and former German Federal Minister of Justice and Vice Chancellor Erich Koch-Weser, who had a Jewish mother.

Caio Koch-Weser settled in West Germany in 1961, at 17, where he took his Abitur and went on to study economics, sociology and history in Münster, Berlin and Bonn.

Career in the World Bank

Koch-Weser joined the World Bank in 1973. He served as Personal Assistant to the President of the Bank Robert McNamara (1977–1980), Division Chief for China (1980–1986), and Director of Western Africa Department (1986–1990). In 1990 he was assigned to the Treasurer's Department, and in 1991 he became Vice President of Middle East and North Africa (MNA). As Vice President of MNA, Koch-Weser was responsible for improving economic relations between the Middle East and North Africa. In November 1995, the Middle Eastern markets and income were declining, and Koch-Weser explained this was because the Middle East "squandered their potential during good times and then reaped the whirlwind in bad ones".[2] He was also appointed one of the Managing Directors of the World Bank in 1996. During his career in the World Bank, he mostly lived in Washington D.C. but also worked in Asia, Latin America, Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.

Secretary of State in the Ministry of Finance

In May 1999 he was appointed Secretary of State in the Federal Ministry of Finance, and as such the administrative head of the Ministry and deputy of the Federal Minister of Finance. Despite being appointed to a political position in the SPD government, he is not member of a political party.

He was nominated by the German government for the post as head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in 2000, but because he was rejected by the United States, the German government eventually nominated Horst Köhler, who was elected. Horst Köhler, one of Koch-Weser's predecessors as Secretary of State in the Ministry of Finance, would later become President of Germany.

After politics

After the 2005 elections and the formation of a new government under Chancellor Angela Merkel, Koch-Weser decided to leave his post at the Ministry of Finance, and was appointed to the board of Deutsche Bank, as Vice Chairman, in January 2006. He is also active as an advisor for major customers of the bank on financial, economic and strategic developments, and represents the bank in key public forums worldwide. He has been based in London since 2006.

Corporate boards

  • BG Group, Non-Executive Member of the Board of Director (2010-2016)

Non-profit organizations

Personal life

He is married to Maritta Rogalla von Bieberstein, of the noble Rogalla von Bieberstein family. They have 3 children.

References

  1. "Koch-Weser to join Deutsche Bank as Vice Chairman". Archived from the original on 2010-06-01. Retrieved 2010-01-06.
  2. The Leaf-Chronicle. (November 1, 1995). Mideast Economic Summit Ends.
  3. "Trustees of the Blum Center for Developing Economies". Archived from the original on 2011-11-10. Retrieved 2011-10-26.
  4. Panel of Senior Advisers Chatham House.
  5. "Bertelsmann Stiftung: Neue Organisation der Führungsstruktur". Frankfurter Rundschau (in German). 30 September 2000. p. 18.
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