Georg Fahrenschon | |
|---|---|
| Bavarian Minister of Finance | |
| In office 2008–2011 | |
| Preceded by | Erwin Huber |
| Succeeded by | Markus Söder |
| Member of theBundestag | |
| In office 2002–2007 | |
| Preceded by | Martin Mayer |
| Succeeded by | Florian Hahn |
| Personal details | |
| Born | (1968-02-08)8 February 1968 (age 57) |
| Political party | Christian Social Union of Bavaria |
| Alma mater | University of Augsburg |
| Profession | Economist |
| Website | georg-fahrenschon |
Georg Fahrenschon (born 8 February 1968) is a German politician of theChristian Social Union (CSU). From 2008 to 2011, he served as finance minister in the Bavarian State Ministry of Finance. He was a member of theBundestag ofGermany until 2007.[1]
Fahrenschon graduated with adiplom in economics from theUniversity of Augsburg in 1999.
Following the2002 federal elections, Fahrenschon became a Member of the German Bundestag, where he served on the Finance Committee. Within the Finance Committee, he was theCDU/CSU parliamentary group’srapporteur on Germany'sTransparency Directive Implementation Act (Transparenzrichtlinie-Umsetzungsgesetz, TUG), among others.
Following theBavarian state elections in 2008, Fahrenschon was made State Minister of Finance in the cabinet ofMinister-PresidentHorst Seehofer. During his time in office, he led the talks with his Austrian counterpartJosef Proell in 2009 aboutAustria nationalizingHypo Alpe-Adria-Bank International, a local unit ofBayernLB, after heavy losses tied to loans in Southeast and Eastern Europe had driven the overextended lender to the brink of collapse.[2][3]
In the negotiations to form acoalition government following the2009 federal elections, Fahrenschon was a member of the working group on taxes, national budget and financial policy, led byThomas de Maizière andHermann Otto Solms.
In 2011, Fahrenschon presented a proposal envisaging tax cuts of 5 billion euros ($6.5 billion) for lower- and middle incomes by 2013, the year of the subsequent federal election; this move put him in conflict with federal Finance MinisterWolfgang Schäuble, who wanted to delay tax cuts to cut Germany’s budget deficit.[4]
In October 2011, it became known that both Fahrenschon andSteffen Kampeter, Parliamentary State Secretary at theGerman Finance Ministry would be seeking the presidency of the DSGV after incumbent Heinrich Haasis stepped down.[5]
In 2012, Fahrenschon led Germany’s savings banks in helping quash a proposal for Europe-wide deposit guarantees.[6] He later sought to limit the remaining aspects of a European banking union, namely a joint resolution fund and central supervision of all the region’s lenders.[7] Eventually, it was agreed that day-to-day supervision of all but one of the 417 Sparkassen – the largest, theHamburger Sparkasse is the exception – would remain in German hands.[8]
In November 2017, shortly before Fahrenschon was scheduled to stand for re-election for another six-year term,[9] prosecutors in Munich charged Fahrenschon withtax evasion; he admitted to having filed his tax statements for 2012, 2013 and 2014 too late but denied the allegation and declined to pay a fine.[10] Following internal and public pressure, he resigned from his post.[11]
Fahrenschon is married and has two daughters.