Esko Aho | |
|---|---|
Esko Aho in 2022 | |
| 37thPrime Minister of Finland | |
| In office 26 April 1991 – 13 April 1995 | |
| President | Mauno Koivisto Martti Ahtisaari |
| Deputy | Ilkka Kanerva Pertti Salolainen |
| Preceded by | Harri Holkeri |
| Succeeded by | Paavo Lipponen |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Esko Tapani Aho (1954-05-20)20 May 1954 (age 71) Veteli, Finland |
| Political party | Centre |
| Spouse | Kirsti Aho |
| Profession | Master of Political Sciences,Visiting Professor at Sciences Po, Paris |
Esko Tapani Aho (born 20 May 1954) is a Finnish politician who wasprime minister of Finland from 1991 to 1995.[1]
Aho was born inVeteli,Finland. Prior to attending university, he began a career in politics. From 1974 to 1979, he was chairman of theFinnish Centre Youth, many of whose previous chairmen had risen to high political positions. In 1978, he became a presidential elector, a position he also held in 1982 and 1998. From 1979 to 1980, Aho was political secretary of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. From 1980 to 1983, he was a trade promoter for the municipality of Kannus.[2]
Aho studied at theUniversity of Helsinki, graduating with a Master of Social Science degree in 1981.[2]
Since 2010, he has been a member of the board of theSkolkovo Innovation Center. Currently, he is a visiting professor atSciences Po, Paris.[3]


Aho was first elected to theFinnish Parliament (eduskunta) in 1983. He became chairman of theCentre Party in 1990, a position that he held until 2002. The party was at the time one of three major political parties in Finland.[4]
At 36 years of age, he was the youngest prime minister in Finnish history.[5]
Aho was the prime minister of a centre-right coalition government (Centre Party,National Coalition Party,Christian Democrats andSwedish People's Party) from 1991 to 1995. He is best known for leading Finland into theEuropean Union.[5] Aho's own party, most of whose voters lived and live in rural areas, was the most opposed to EU membership among major parties. The greatest concern of these voters was the EU's effect on Finnish agriculture,[6] but they were persuaded to support membership due to the prime minister's diplomacy. Finland applied for EU membership on 16 March 1992, and a referendum was held two and a half years later.[7] Aho's government also faced thedeep economic depression of the early 1990s. Despite a steep rise in the national debt, the Aho government applied a stringent policy of austerity that made it unpopular. This partly caused its fall in the 1995 election and the Centre Party's eight-year period in the opposition.[8]
Aho had the nickname "Kennedy of Kannus"Kannus being his hometown) due to his streamlined and well coiffed habitus reminiscent ofJohn F. Kennedy.
Esko Aho lost the bid forPresident of Finland toTarja Halonen in 2000. He subsequently retired from active politics, initially in the form of a "sabbatical leave" of one year, during which he led a study group on the EU in the 2000 fall semester atHarvard University (where he was a resident fellow at the Institute of Politics).[5] In the 2003 election he left[clarification needed] parliament and retired from daily politics. He then served as the president of the Finnish national innovation fundSITRA (the Finnish National Fund for Research and Development).[9]
In 2008, Aho's name was included in an opinion poll on possible presidential candidates, in which he ranked last.[10]
On 1 November 2008, Aho becameNokia's executive vice president of corporate relations and responsibility and became a member of its executive board.[11][12]
At the time of his rise to prime minister, he was the youngest head of government in Europe.
Aho became a member of the board of directors of the RussianSberbank in 2016.[13] He resigned from the position in February 2022 following theRussian invasion of Ukraine.[14]
| Political offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | Speaker of the Parliament of Finland April 1991 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by | Prime Minister of Finland 1991–1995 | Succeeded by |