Preceded by Suzana Grubjesic Succeeded by Radovan Jelasic Preceded by Kalman Mizsei Name Kori Udovicki | Succeeded by Cihan Sultanoglu Preceded by Mladan Dinkic Siblings Lenka Udovicki | |
![]() | ||
Preceded by Nikola Selakovic (Public Administration)Igor Mirovic (Local Self-Government) Nieces Alma Serbedzija, Vanja Serbedzija, Nina Serbedzija, Milica Alma Serbedzija |
Kori udovicki o reformi javne uprave 27 12 2014
Kori Udovički, Ph.D. (Serbian Cyrillic: Кори Удовички) ([kôri udoʋǐtʃkiː]) (born 4 December 1961 in La Paz, Bolivia) is a Serbian politician, former Deputy Prime Minister of Serbia, and the Minister of Public Administration and Local Self-Government in the Government of Serbia.
Contents
- Kori udovicki o reformi javne uprave 27 12 2014
- Birn srbija sto dana vlade drugi panel kori udovicki
- Education and political career
- Personal and trivia
- References

Prior to that position, she served as an Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations, Assistant Administrator of the UNDP and Director of the Regional Bureau of UNDP for Europe and Commonwealth of Independent States (RBEC) from 2007 to 2012.

Previously she was the founder and the President of the Center for Advanced Economic Studies (CEVES), a Belgrade NGO that works for the advancement of economic research and education in South East Europe. She was also President of the Board of Directors of the Foundation for the Advancement of Economics (FREN). CEVES's main publication is Quarterly Monitor of Economic Trends and Policies in Serbia, a publication that systematically monitors macroeconomic, corporate and financial trends and policies in Serbia. It comes out in Serbian and English and is also posted on the CEVES and FREN websites. Kori Udovički was the Editor in Chief until February 2007.

Birn srbija sto dana vlade drugi panel kori udovicki
Education and political career
She graduated from the University of Belgrade Faculty of Economics in 1984 she obtained an MA (1988) and a PhD (1999) in Economics from Yale University. She researched inter-regional trade and integration between the republics of the former Yugoslavia. More recently, she has studied the sustainability of Serbia's macroeconomic framework. From 1993 to 2001, she worked at the IMF in Washington, D.C. and then returned to Belgrade as Special Advisor to the Serbian Minister of Finance and Economic Affairs. In 2002, she became Minister of Energy and Mining in Serbian Government. She was appointed Governor of the National Bank of Serbia on July 23, 2003, a position she held until February 25, 2004, when her appointment was annulled due to the illegal use of a proxy vote in the Serbian parliament.
Personal and trivia

She is married and has three children. Her uncle is the former Bolivian president, Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada. Her father was a politician of former communist Yugoslavia Lazar Udovički who served as ambassador in Bolivia.
