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Jens Weidmann

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Preceded by
  
Axel A. Weber

Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Jens Weidmann


Alma mater
  
University of Bonn

Nationality
  
German

Education
  
University of Bonn

Jens Weidmann Bundesbank chief Jens Weidmann 39considered resigning over

Born
  
20 April 1968 (age 56) Solingen, Nordrhein-Westfalen (
1968-04-20
)

Keynote address by Jens Weidmann at the joint IMF-Bundesbank conference


Jens Weidmann (born 20 April 1968) is a German economist, president of the Deutsche Bundesbank, and Chairman of the Board of the Bank for International Settlements.

Contents

Jens Weidmann Jens Weidmann QE not 39out of the question39 Telegraph

Before assuming the top Bundesbank position in 2011, from February 2006, he served as Head of Division IV (Economic and Financial Policy) in the Federal Chancellery. He was the chief negotiator of the Federal Republic of Germany for both the summits of the G8 and the G20.

Jens Weidmann Jens Weidmann Photos Wulff Appoints Jens Weidmann New

Early life and academic career

Jens Weidmann Exclusive Weidmann says not ECB39s job to tackle Spain39s

Weidmann was born in Solingen. In 1987, Weidmann graduated from gymnasium in Backnang, Baden-Württemberg after which he studied economics at Aix-Marseille University, the University of Paris, and University of Bonn. He received his Diplom in economics in 1993. From 1993 to 1994, he commenced his Ph.D studies on European monetary policy under the supervision of professor Roland Vaubel at the University of Mannheim, but later transferred back to Bonn again. He received his doctoral degree under the auspices of monetary theorist Manfred J. M. Neumann in 1997. During his studies Weidmann had internships at the Banque de France and the National Bank of Rwanda. Due to the resulting knowledge of the French financing sector his later career in German financial politics was welcomed in France and seen as a support of the Franco-German twin engine. His education has been characterized as specialising in monetarist economics.

Professional career

Jens Weidmann Merkel selects economic hawk to lead Bundesbank Business

From 1997 to 1999, Weidmann worked at the International Monetary Fund. Until 2004 he worked as Secretary of the German Council of Economic Experts. During his time at the Council, he played a key role in compiling a 20-point plan for boosting growth and employment that formed the basis of then-Chancellor Gerhard Schröder’s Agenda 2010 reforms.

From there he moved to the Bundesbank, where until 2006 he was the head of the Monetary Policy and Monetary Analysis group.

Advisor to Chancellor Angela Merkel, 2006-2011

In 2006, Weidmann began working at the Federal Chancellery, where he was responsible for preparing the content and strategy of the G-20 round which was formed to counter the effects of the financial crisis. When he started, he was the youngest department head in the German government. Chancellor Angela Merkel promoted him in December 2009 to the influential role of the Sherpa of the G8 summits as she considers the G8 round to be only a pre-summit of the G20 round in the field of the world-wide financial system as well as that most other subjects need a wider context than the G8 as well (compare Heiligendamm Process for G8+5).

During his time at the Federal Chancellery, Weidmann was involved in a series of major decisions in response to the financial crisis in Germany and Europe: preventing the meltdown of the bank Hypo Real Estate, guaranteeing German deposits and implementing a rescue programme for the banking system, piecing together two fiscal-stimulus programmes, and setting up the Greek bail-out package and the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF).

In 2011, Weidmann suggested to Merkel that the position of Bundesbank vice president, which had also become vacant, be filled by Sabine Lautenschläger, then director of Germany's Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin).

President of the Bundesbank, 2011–present

In February, 2011, Weidmann was designated to succeed Axel A. Weber as president of the Deutsche Bundesbank. In September, with the ongoing European sovereign debt crisis, Weidmann was observed by a British commentator, David Marsh, to be taking a "cool" course relative to Chancellor Merkel. Marsh wrote that Weidmann was saying the European Monetary Union (EMU) "has to go in one of two directions. Either it takes the path of a fiscal union in which member countries fuse together their economic and financial systems into a much more robust framework that will protect them from internal dislocation. Weidmann says, coolly, this is somewhat unlikely. Or EMU remains a looser grouping of countries that will face the discipline of the financial markets if they fail to produce economic convergence," namely exit from the EMU and default, looking particularly at Greece. Marsh also noted that Merkel is committed to the first course and so may come into conflict with her one-time economic adviser Weidmann.

In a late November, 2011, speech in Berlin, Weidmann criticized the errors and "many years of wrong developments" of the EMU’s peripheral states, particularly the wasted opportunity represented by their "disproportionate investment in private home-building, high government spending or private consumption", David Marsh reported. In early December, with another in a string of Eurozone summits imminent, Bloomberg commented that the new ECB head Mario Draghi "knows he can't afford to repeat" his predecessor Jean-Claude Trichet's mistake of alienating the Bundesbank. Draghi was said in the report to be courting Weidmann by, among others, Julian Callow, chief European economist at Barclays in London.

In May, 2012, Weidmann's stance was characterized by US economist and columnist Paul Krugman as amounting to wanting to destroy the Euro.

Weidmann, in late August 2012, was reported to have threatened to resign as Draghi's July 2012 promise to do "whatever it takes" to save the Euro seemed likely to lead to purchases of Italian and Spanish bonds to keep interest rates in those major member economies capped at manageable levels. "In an interview with Der Spiegel last week, Weidmann said the bond buying made it look as if ECB was financing governments directly — and shouldn’t go ahead", reported another MarketWatch commentator, Matthew Lynn. Lynn further speculated on the Draghi-Weidmann interaction, reminding readers of Axel Weber's 2011 resignation over a "similar [ECB] scheme" and also of the 1992 failure of the European Exchange Rate Mechanism over German refusal to choose "printing money (taking some small risks with inflation) ... to stabilize the system".

On Wednesday, February 24, 2016, as part of the Bundesbank's annual news conference, Bundesbank president and European Central Bank Governing Council member, Jens Weidmann, dismissed deflation in light of the ECB's current stimulus program, pointing out the healthy condition of the German economy and that the euro area isn't that bad off, on the eve of the March 9–10, 2016 meetings.

Other activities

  • International Monetary Fund (IMF), ex-officio Member of the Board of Governors
  • Bank of International Settlements, ex-officio Member of the Board of Directors
  • Financial Stability Board, ex-officio Member
  • Deutsche Nationalstiftung, Member of the Senate
  • Frankfurt School of Finance & Management Foundation, Member of the Board of Trustees
  • House of Finance, Goethe University Frankfurt, Member of the Board of Trustees
  • Stifterverband für die Deutsche Wissenschaft, ex-officio Member of the Board of Trustees
  • Recognition (selection)

  • 2016 – Medal for Extraordinary Merits for Bavaria in a United Europe
  • 2015 – International Prize, Friedrich August von Hayek Foundation
  • 2014 – Wolfram Engels Award, Stiftung Marktwirtschaft
  • 2013 – Honorary degree, HEC Paris
  • Selected publications

  • Leite, Carlos A.; ——— (1999). "Does Mother Nature Corrupt? Natural Resources, Corruption, and Economic Growth". IMF Working Paper No. 99/85. SSRN 259928 . 
  • Neumann, Manfred J. M.; ——— (1998). "The Information Content of German Discount Rate Changes". European Economic Review. 42 (9): 1667–1682. doi:10.1016/S0014-2921(97)00110-4. 
  • ——— (1996). "New Hope for the Fisher Effect?: A Reexamination Using Threshold Cointegration". SFB 303 Discussion Paper B-385. SSRN 3555 . 
  • Henry, Jérôme; ——— (1995). "Asymmetry in the EMS Revisited: Evidence from the Causality Analysis of Daily Eurorates". Annales d'Économie et de Statistique. 40: 125–160. JSTOR 20076018. 
  • References

    Jens Weidmann Wikipedia