Chen Yuan
Chen Yuan | |
---|---|
陈元 | |
Born | 1945 (age 78–79) Qingpu District, Jiangsu, China |
Nationality | Chinese |
Citizenship | People's Republic of China |
Occupation | Chairman of the Board of China Development Bank Vice Chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference |
Movements in contemporary |
Chinese political thought |
---|
Chen Yuan (Chinese: 陈元, born in January 1945) was the Chairman of the China Development Bank from March 1998 to April 2013. Chen Yuan then served as Vice Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference from 2013 to 2018. He is the eldest son of the former Chinese Vice Premier Chen Yun.
Biography
Chen Yuan graduated with a master's degree in Industrial Economics from the Graduate School of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, where he studied under the supervision of economists Yu Guangyuan and Ma Hong. He was appointed secretary of the Xicheng District Committee of the Beijing Municipal Committee of the Communist Party (CPC) and director-general of the Beijing Municipal Commerce and Trade Department in August 1982.
He assumed the post of deputy secretary of the leading party members' group and vice governor of the People's Bank of China in March 1988. Chen's leadership at the People's Bank of China was noteworthy. It was a time when China was just opening up trading with the West. Prior to 1988 when Chen joined PBOC, there were almost no international reserves. However, by 1992, as trade increased, the foreign reserves also started to grow as a result of the international trade to over US$10 billion. Thus, Chen was charged with helping to turn the People's Bank of China into a modern central bank. As one of the key things he did, he brought in outside advisors such as William Lawton, a noted fixed income and currency expert who was a Senior Vice President in charge of global fixed income at Trust Company of the West, a well known international asset management company headquartered in Los Angeles. Chen oversaw the implementation under Lawton's supervision of risk guidelines for the Bank, utilization of research models such as the Lawton Bond Model, and upgrading of the computer and trading systems. It was under Chen's leadership and foresight that PBOC was put on a firm footing to become the world's largest central bank in a little over a decade.
His father is Chen Yun, who was one of the Eight Elders of Communist Party of China. In the 1980s and 1990s, Chen Yun was regarded as the second most powerful person in China after Deng Xiaoping. [1]
References
- ^ Michael Forsythe, Henry Sanderson (June 2011). "Financing China Costs Poised to Rise With CDB Losing Sovereign-Debt Status". Bloomberg Market Magazine.
External links
- People's Republic of China economists
- Living people
- Chen Yun family
- People's Republic of China politicians from Shanghai
- Communist Party of China politicians from Shanghai
- Members of the Preparatory Committee for the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region
- Beijing No. 4 High School alumni
- China Development Bank people
- 1945 births
- Economists from Shanghai
- Vice Chairpersons of the National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
- Chinese academic biography stubs
- Asian economist stubs