Vladimír Dlouhý (politician)


Vladimír Dlouhý is a Czech economist and politician.

Biography

Vladimír Dlouhý is a Czech  economist and politician, former deputy chairman of the ODA political partyand Minister of Industry and Trade between 1992 and 1997 in  the government of Václav Klaus. Between 1989 and 1992 he served as the Minister of Economy of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic. He currently works in the private sector and in the field of consulting and pedagogy activities. In May 2014, he was elected a President of the Czech Chamber of Commerce.

Education

He studied economics at the University of Economics in Prague and graduated in 1977. Between 1977 and 1978, he studied MBA at the Catholic University in Leuven in Belgium. As he was required to return to the  Socialist Czechoslovakia, he did not manage to finish the two-year MBA studies. Between 1980 and 1982, he studied at  the Charles University in a postgraduate programme  of mathematical statistics and probability. Simultaneously, in 1980, he started Ph.D. studies at the University of Economics in Prague and, in 1983, he earned the degree of a candidate of science by defending dissertation thesis on the topic of ‘Unequal models of the socialist economy’ A year later, this work was published as a book co-authored by Karel Dyba.

Teaching

Between 1977 and 1983, he lectured at the University of Economics. In 1984, he was a founding member of the Prognostic Department of the Czechoslovak Academy of Sciences, which later became  the Prognostic Institute. There, he first worked as a research assistant, later as a head of department and eventually as a deputy head.
At the same time, he published in both domestic and foreign specialized journals and at international conferences. Since 2000, he has been lecturing again as a university teacher at the Institute of Economic Studies, Faculty of Social Sciences of the Charles University in Prague of the Illinois Institute of Technology based in  Chicago. Since 2014, he has been a member of the Board of Directors of the Czech Technical University in Prague and, since 2018, he has also been a member of the Board of Directors of the Brno University of Technology.

Private life

He has divorced twice; from his first marriage he has a son, Štěpán, and daughter, Markéta. His interests include music, history and sport, especially skiing, golf, cycling and running.

Political carrer

In  1978, he joined  the Communist Party and terminated his membership in December 1989.
In the third week of the November revolution of 1989 he was nominated as one of 10 Communists to the government of Czechoslovak Socialist Republic and on 10 December 1989 he was appointed Deputy Prime Minister of the federal government where he also served as a Chairman of  the State Planning Commission. In December 1989, he quit the Communist Party.
In the election she joined the Assembly of People of the Federal Assembly and at the same time was appointed Federal Minister of Economy of  the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic. After dissolution of the Civic Forum in the autumn  of 1991 he joined the Civil Democratic Alliance and became its deputy head and in 1992 he was a lead candidate of ODA in the South Moravia. After the 1992 elections and the dissolution of the Czech and Slovak Federal Republic he joined  the coalition government of Václav Klaus and was appointed the Minister of Industry and Trade. In the  coalition government of Václav Klaus and in the same post he stayed even after elections in 1996, when he was elected to the Chamber of Deputies of the Parliament of the Czech Republic. In June 1997, he left all government and political posts.
In June 2012, he announced his intention to run for the president in 2013. Following the verification of signatures on petition sheets the Ministry of Interior refused to register his candidacy due to insufficient number of signatures.

Private sphere

After leaving politics in 1997, he worked in the private sphere. Since September 1997 until now he has worked as an international adviser for multinational investment bank Goldman Sachs where he is responsible for Central and Eastern Europe.
From 1998 to 2010, he worked as an adviser for ABB. Since 2010, he has been an adviser to the French investment fund Meridiam Infrastructure based in Paris. In the past, he was either a member of supervisory boards or an adviser to a number of other companies, such as Cofinec B.V in Amsterdam, Telefónica Czech Republic, KSK Power Ventur based in Hyderabad, India, PSJ, a.s. and others. From 2013 to 2018, he was a member of Rolls Royce International Advisory Group. He is currently also a member of the Supervisory Board of Kooperativa.

Additional activities

He is a member of a number of international and domestic institutions. Between 2006 and 2008, he was a member of an Independent Energy Commission, where he participated in the preparation of the long-term energy concept of the Czech Republic, published in the second half of 2008. Since  2009, he has been a member of the National Economic Council of the Czech government ; in 2020, he was  appointed again to this Council. Between 2010 and 2012, he was a member of the European group of advisers to the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund. He publishes extensively as an author or co-author ranging from specialized texts to articles in the daily paper.
In 2009, he established public benefit company Prague Twenty, focused on the organisation of expert lectures in the field of politics, social sciences and culture, with the participation of foreign and domestic experts.
Over the past years, many representatives from the Czech Republic have presented at these events and abroad.
On 22 May 2014 in Plzeň he was elected at its Assembly as the President of the Czech Chamber of Commerce. He received 128 votes, thereby defeating Zdeněk Somr, who received 87 votes. In 2017, he was re-elected to hold the same post. In 2019, he was elected one of the Deputy Presidents of Eurochambres, an institution associating the European chambers of commerce and industry, based in Brussels.
Together with Václav Klaus he was awarded ‘Ropák’ of the year 1993 and, in April 2016, he was awarded the Green Pearl for the following statement: ‘It is always quite difficult to interpret similar studies and results, but this really shows that the Třebíč Region and the whole southern part of the Vysočina Region would suffer very significantly economically and in the long term, if Dukovany were to be shut down or were not expanded.’ As much as the current numbers are ambiguous, which the authors admit, their conclusion is indisputable.