Sylvestre Ilunga was born in 1947 in the Katanga Province. He hails from the Luba ethnic group of Katanga. Ilunga worked as an economics professor at the University of Kinshasa since 1979. Ilunga entered politics in 1970 and held various government offices throughout the 1980s and 1990s, notably the cabinet posts of Minister of Planning and Minister of Finance under the regime of Mobutu Sese Seko. After the fall of the Mobutu regime, Ilunga left the country and established a mining company in South Africa in 1993. He would return to the DRC a decade later. Since the 1990s he has largely been in retirement, except for being appointed in 2014 as the head of the SNCC, the national railway company of DR Congo. He was an economic advisor to the young President Joseph Kabila early in his term and oversaw the implementation of World Bank and IMF mandated reforms, including the privatisation of some government assets. On 20 May 2019, at the age of 72, he was designated as the Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in a deal negotiated by President Félix Tshisekedi and the Common Front for Congo ruling coalition in the country's parliament, which are allied with Tshisekedi's predecessor Joseph Kabila. Since the December 2018 general election the former opposition leader had been in negotiations with the Kabila-allied parties to nominate a Prime Minister, which had secured a majority in the election. Other potential candidates included mining executive Albert Yuma, finance minister Henri Yav, and former national security advisorJean Mbuyu were suggested but were rejected by the President for different reasons. Norbert Nkulu, a member of the DRC's Constitutional Court, and Jean Nyembo Shabani, the former head of the Central Bank of Zaire, suggested Ilunga. President Tshisekedi and the parliament agreed to form a new government on July 27, 2019, more than six months after the 2018 election, beginning Ilunga's formal nomination for Prime Minister. Ilunga's new cabinet is to include 65 members, including 48 ministers and 17 vice-ministers, out of which 42 posts will go to the Common Front for Congo and 23 will be for Heading for Change. Negotiations between Kabila and Tshisekedi had stalled over who would control the six "sovereign ministries" listed in the DRC's constitution—Finance, Defense, Budget, Justice, Interior, and Foreign Affairs. The new cabinet was formally established in late August 2019. As prime minister, Ilunga has also been overseeing negotiations with the IMF for another aid program to the DRC.