Henrique Meirelles | |
|---|---|
Official portrait, 2019 | |
| Secretary of Finance and Planning of São Paulo | |
| In office 1 January 2019 – 1 April 2022 | |
| Governor | João Doria |
| Preceded by | Luiz Cláudio de Carvalho |
| Succeeded by | Tomás Bruginski de Paula |
| Minister of Finance | |
| In office 12 May 2016 – 6 April 2018 | |
| President | Michel Temer |
| Preceded by | Nelson Barbosa |
| Succeeded by | Eduardo Guardia |
| President of theCentral Bank | |
| In office 1 January 2003 – 31 December 2010 | |
| President | Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva |
| Preceded by | Arminio Fraga |
| Succeeded by | Alexandre Tombini |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Henrique de Campos Meirelles (1945-08-31)31 August 1945 (age 80) |
| Political party | UNIÃO (2022–present) |
| Other political affiliations | |
| Spouse | |
| Alma mater | |
| Signature | |
Henrique de Campos Meirelles (born 31 August 1945) is a Brazilian manager and formerMinister of Finance and an executive of the Brazilian and the international financial sectors and former president ofCentral Bank of Brazil (Portuguese:Banco Central do Brasil) where he remained in office from 2003 to 2011. He chairs J&F's board of directors, company that owns Banco Original,JBS and Vigor, among others. He is also a member of the board of directors ofAzul Brazilian Airlines.[1][2][3][4]
Meirelles was theBrazilian Democratic Movement (MDB)'s candidate for president of Brazil in the2018 elections.[5]
Meirelles, is the son of Hegesipo de Campos Meirelles, former attorney of Banco do Estado de Goiás and Diva Silva de Campos, a wedding gown designer.[9]
He left the city ofGoiânia to study civil engineering at the School of Engineering of the University of São Paulo (Portuguese:Escola Politécnica da Universidade de São Paulo) inSão Paulo, where he graduated in 1972.[7][10]
In 1974, he completed an MBA inBusiness Administration from Coppead Institute atFederal University of Rio de Janeiro (Portuguese:Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro), UFRJ.[11]
His career began in 1974 atBankBoston, where he worked for 28 years, with national and international operations.[7][12]
In 1984, with appointment by a BankBoston board member, Meirelles attended the six-week Advanced Management Program (AMP) atHarvard Business School.[14] Meirelles also received an honorary title as doctor byBryant College.[10]
In July of that year, with his return to Brazil, Meirelles was appointed president of BankBoston in Brazil, a position he held for 12 years.[17]
In 1996, Meirelles moved toBoston, Massachusetts, and assumed the position of President and COO of BankBoston worldwide. He held the position until 1999.[8][10][13][15]
In 1999, BankBoston Corporation merged withFleet Financial Group, formingFleetBoston Financial. Henrique Meirelles became president of FleetBoston Financial's Global Banking.[19]
While in the United States, Meirelles was one of the most popular members ofBill Clinton's court case.[8]
In 2002, Meirelles retired and returned to Brazil.[6][8]
With a youth marked by public performances, when he was part of the student movement inGoiânia and led strikes against bus ticket and school supply prices, influenced by a political family – his grandfather was mayor ofAnápolis three times, his father occupied roles in the State Secretariat of Goiás twice, and an uncle who was Governor – from then on Meirelles started his political career, to which he dedicated himself from 2002 to 2014.[7]
In 2012, at the invitation of the president of JBS's board of directors,Joesley Batista, Henrique Meirelles took on the advisory board of J&F, the holding company that controls 7 companies, including JBS, the world's largest meat company. The J&F Group has a total revenue estimated at R$65 billion.[25]
Considered one of the most respected figures in the Brazilian business environment, in early 2012, Meirelles received 12 job offers from the private sector, among them was the presidency ofBarclays andGoldman Sachs banks in Brazil.[3]
In 2002, Meirelles ran for congressman in Goiás with the political partyPSDB and was elected with the largest number of votes in the state – 183,000 votes.[8][16][26]
His electoral success and the support of the international financial market received throughout his professional career in the private sector, caused Meirelles to be appointed by PresidentLula to the office of president of Brazil's Central Bank – Banco Central do Brasil (BCB). In 2003, Meirelles resigned as congressman in Goiás and left PSDB to become president of BCB.[16][27] Meirelles led Banco Central do Brazil during the eight years of President Lula's administration and, in November 2010, he announced his departure.[2][28]
In 2005, he was the first president of the CBC to formally obtain the status of State Secretary.[29] In early 2010, Meirelles ruled out a possible candidacy as governor of Goiás with the democratic party PMDB, at the request of President Lula who asked him to devote himself to the control of Banco Central until the date when he had to leave the role in order to run for elective office in early April 2011.[30]
In 2011, three months after the announcement of his departure from the leadership of BCB, and at the invitation of PresidentDilma Rousseff, Meirelles took office in the Public Olympic Council. His function, with a 4-year term, was to coordinate all investments for the2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. With a budget of R$30 million, Meirelles acted with autonomy in the coordination of federal, state and municipal construction work until 2014.[2][31][32]
In 2014, Meirelles was invited by the PMDB candidate to the government of SP, Paulo Skaff, to compete in the Senate in their political platform. Meirelles denied the request.[4]
In 2015, Meirelles was replaced by businesswoman Luiza Trajano at the Public Olympic Council.[33]
Also in 2015, there were rumors that Meirelles would have been appointed by former President Lula to be Secretary of Finance during the 2nd term of President Dilma Rousseff's administration, starting in January 2015. This was not achieved and Joaquim Levy took the office.[34][35]
In mid-2015, following internal dissension in the executive power and friction inCongress, rumors re-emerged that Henrique Meirelles could be a strong possibility of replacing finance secretaryJoaquim Levy, head of the Ministry of Finance.[1][36][37]
WhenMichel Temer became the interim president, in May 2016, Henrique Meirelles was nominatedMinister of Finance and Social Security.[38][39] Meirelles's party, theBrazilian Democratic Movement, announced in May 2018 his pre-candidacy for the presidency of Brazil. On 2 August 2018, he officially became the party's candidate for president.[5]
In the2022 Brazilian general election, Meirelles has endorsed the candidacy ofLuiz Inácio Lula da Silva.[40] In September 2022, Meirelles was hired by cryptocurrency exchangeBinance.[citation needed]
With operations during the eight years of Lula's government (2003–2010), Meirelles was the President of Brazil's Central Bank (BCB) who held the longest office.[2][28][29]
His management at Banco Central began at a time when the country's economy was in crisis. With an inflation of 12.5% per year, an actual interest rate of 18.5%, international reserves of US$38 billion – considered low – and the dollar exchange rate at almost R$4.00.[8][16]
His first step was to make Copom (Monetary Policy Committee of Banco Central) raise interest rates.[8] Throughout his office term, Meirelles was pressured to *accelerate the decrease of interest rates. Members of the government and outside members claimed that the country could have a larger growth rate with a higher inflation.[41]
Meirelles presented inflation rates within the target set by the National Monetary Council in every year of his tenure, except in 2003, when there was a "deterioration of expectations." because of a market reaction to Lula's lead in the presidential race.[29]
According to theBrazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), – Henrique Meirelles' management period was the one with the longest growth cycle in the country's recent history, with a rate of 3% per year for more than 60 months.[41]
In 2003, the internal growth was 1.1%. In 2004, it increased to 5.7%. In 2005, 2006 and 2007, the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) increased, respectively: 3.2%, 4% and 6.1%. In 2008, the Brazilian economy grew 5.1%.[29][41]
In 2004, inflation rates measured by theIPCA – National Index of Prices and Ample Consumers – had receded to 7.6% and in 2005 to 5.69%. In 2006, the IPCA totaled 3.14% and in 2008, linked to the strong economic growth, it increased to 5.9%. In 2005, Meirelles was the first president of BCB to formally obtain the status of Secretary of State.[29]
At the end of his tenure, Meirelles presented a growth in the country's economy that went from R$38 billion to R $280 billion. According to experts, this was a major factor that helped the country go through the international crisis of 2008 and 2009 without major consequences.[8][29]
According toGustavo Franco, CEO ofRio Bravo, in an interview byÉpoca, the country's stability and defense during the international crisis of 2009 is directly linked to Henrique Meirelles, head of Banco Central, whose work helped maintain the country's course, avoiding the destabilization of the economy.[42]
At the end of his two mandates in 2009, Henrique Meirelles was credited responsible for reducing inflation by half and interest rates to the lowest level in history.[3]
Meirelles was invited by Joesley Batista to chair the board of directors at J&F, the holding company that controlsJBS, Original Bank, Vigor Alimentos, Brazil Eldorado (pulp and paper), Flora Higiene Pessoal, Floresta Agropecuária and Canal Rural.[43][44]
Batista entrusted Meirelles with the task of professionalizing the company by creating more independent decision-making mechanisms. Meirelles was also delegated the responsibility of expanding inside and outside the country, by demanding results from the executives and defining strategies aimed at opening the company's capital in the future.[3][45]
With the announcement of Meireles' arrival, JBS's shares rose by 4.4%. J&F Group ended the year 2011 with a turnover of R$65 billion, around 145 thousand employees and businesses in more than 22 countries.[43]
In 2015, Original Bank, one of the companies belonging to J&F had R$4.6 billion in total assets, which put it in 57th place as the largest bank in the country.[46]
Original Bank initiated in 2015 a project led by Meirelles to transform it in a 100% digital bank, where there will be no branches and all services will be offered through their website.[16][47]
Meirelles is considered to be restless and a workaholic. He sleeps only five hours per night and performs late-night meetings.[6][7]
In the 1960s, Meirelles participated in one of the first courses at the Interlagos Racetrack (Portuguese:Autódromo de Interlagos) where he acquiredrace driver skills.[12]
In November 2017 an investigation conducted by theInternational Consortium of Investigative Journalism cited his name inthe list of politicians named in "Paradise Papers" allegations.[53]
| Government offices | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by | President of the Central Bank 2003–2011 | Succeeded by |
| Political offices | ||
| Preceded by | Minister of Finance 2016–2018 | Succeeded by |
| Preceded by Luiz Claudio Rodrigues de Carvalho | State Secretary of Finance and Planning ofSão Paulo 2019–2022 | Succeeded by Tomás Bruginski de Paula |
| Party political offices | ||
| Preceded by | MDB nominee forPresident of Brazil 2018 | Succeeded by |