Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Gustavo Petricioli

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President
  
Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Gustavo Petricioli


Alma mater
  
Preceded by
  
Jesus Silva Herzog

Succeeded by
  
Gustavo Petricioli wwwapartadoshaciendagobmxgaleriasecretarios

Preceded by
  
Jorge Espinoza de los Reyes

Born
  
19 August 1928Mexico City (
1928-08-19
)

Political party
  
Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI)

Died
  
October 9, 1998, Mexico City, Mexico

Party
  
Institutional Revolutionary Party

Education
  
Instituto Tecnologico Autonomo de Mexico, Monterrey Institute of Technology and Higher Education, Yale University

Gustavo Petricioli, Ambassador of Mexico to the United States


Gustavo Petricioli Iturbide (19 August 1928 – 9 October 1998) was a Mexican economist who served as Secretary of Finance (1986–1988) in the last cabinet of Miguel de la Madrid and as Mexican ambassador to the United States (January 1989 – 1993).

Contents

Cultura del Agua en la Escuela Primaria Gustavo Petricioli 2629


Biography

Petricioli was the son of Carlos Petricioli Alarcón and Ada Iturbide Preciat. He received a high school diploma from the Monterrey Institute of Technology (ITESM), a bachelor's degree in Economics from the ITAM (1952) and a master's degree in the same discipline from Yale University (1958). He lectured on Monetary Theory at both ITAM and the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM), and joined the Revolutionary Institutional Party (PRI) in 1952.

Before joining the federal cabinet Petricioli served as undersecretary of Finance (1970–74), as deputy director of the Bank of Mexico (1975–1976), and as director-general of Nacional Financiera (1982–1986). As secretary of Finance, he co-authored the Pact for Stability and Economic Growth (in Spanish: Pacto para la estabilidad y el crecimiento económico), a national strategy to control the fiscal deficit and inflation in coordination with the private sector.

Petricioli died of a heart attack on 9 October 1998 at Los Angeles Hospital, in Mexico City. He married Rosa Blanca Morales Murphy and they had two children: Gustavo and Ada. After their divorce, he remarried to Mariluisa Castillón, mother of his next two children Hugo and Maria Luisa. In his honor, a remembrance book, El complejo arte de vivir: homenaje a Gustavo Petricioli, was published by Editorial Porrúa and a statue was erected at ITAM; his alma mater.

References

Gustavo Petricioli Wikipedia