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Pierre Paul Schweitzer

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Preceded by
  
Per Jacobsson

Role
  
International lawyer

Nationality
  
France

Succeeded by
  
Johan Witteveen

Profession
  
Lawyer

Children
  
Louis Schweitzer

Name
  
Pierre-Paul Schweitzer


Pierre-Paul Schweitzer imgcallpostersimagescomimagesP48848890484

Born
  
29 May 1912 Strasburg, Elsas-Lothringen, German Empire (
1912-05-29
)

Alma mater
  
University of Paris, Sciences Po

Died
  
January 2, 1994, Geneva, Switzerland

Books
  
The International Monetary Fund and Its Role: The Stamp Memorial Lecture Delivered Before the University of London on 2 December 1969

Education
  
Sciences Po, University of Paris

Similar People
  
Louis Schweitzer, Ivar Rooth, Per Jacobsson, Camille Gutt, Johan Witteveen

Pierre-Paul Schweitzer (29 May 1912 – 2 January 1994) was the International Monetary Fund (IMF)'s fourth Managing Director and Chairman of the Executive Board, serving from 1963 to 1973.

Contents

Early life and education

He was born on 29 May 1912, in Straßburg, Elsaß-Lothringen, German Empire. He is the father of Louis Schweitzer, CEO of Renault. He was the nephew of Albert Schweitzer.

Schweitzer was educated at the University of Strasbourg, the University of Paris, and the Paris School of Political Science (Sciences Po) and received degrees in Law, Economics and Political Science.

Career

In his early career, Schweitzer joined the French Government as an assistant Inspecteur des Finances (1936), before becoming an Inspecteur des Finances (1939). Then he was: Deputy Director for the Department of External Finance of the French Treasury (1946); Alternate Executive Director for France at the IMF (1947); Secretary of the French Interministerial Committee in Charge of Questions on European Economic Cooperation (1948); Financial Attaché at the French Embassy in Washington (1949-1953); Director of the French Treasury (1953-1960). In 1960, he was appointed Deputy Governor of the Bank of France. He also served as a Director of the European Investment Bank, a Director of Air France, and as a government commissioner on the boards of the French Petroleum Company and the French Refinery Company.

On 21 June 1963 Schweitzer was appointed Managing Director and Chairman of the Executive Board of the IMF, and he assumed his duties on 1 September 1963. Schweitzer was appointed to a second five-year term as Managing Director and Chairman of the Board of the IMF on 15 May 1968.

Schweitzer's term as the IMF's Managing Director was a critical period, not only due to the collapse of the Par Value System, but also for the creation of the special drawing rights (SDR), as an international reserve asset (1968); the establishment of the two-tier gold market, and the work of the Committee of Twenty of the International Monetary System on reforming the international financial system. Also, during his tenure as Managing Director of the IMF, its membership grew from 91 to 125 countries.

Schweitzer received many honors and decorations, such as the Commander of the Légion d'Honneur; the Médaille de la Résistance, and the Croix de Guerre.

Schweitzer died on 2 January 1994 in Geneva, Switzerland.

Military service

Schweitzer was commissioned as a lieutenant in the French Army after the outbreak of World War II. When France fell in 1940, he joined the French Resistance and was later captured and held at the Buchenwald concentration camp, on the outskirts of Weimar, Germany, until it was liberated in 1945. Schweitzer was a Nazi concentration camp survivor.

References

Pierre-Paul Schweitzer Wikipedia


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