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Andrej Bajuk

Andrej Bajuk
Andrej Bajuk.jpg
3rd Prime Minister of Slovenia
In office
7 June 2000 – 30 November 2000
Preceded by Janez Drnovšek
Succeeded by Janez Drnovšek
Personal details
Born (1943-10-18)18 October 1943
Ljubljana, Operational Zone of the Adriatic Littoral, now Slovenia
Died 16 August 2011(2011-08-16) (aged 67)
Ljubljana, Slovenia
Political party New Slovenia
Religion Roman Catholicism

Andrej Bajuk, also known in Spanish as Andrés Bajuk (18 October 1943 – 16 August 2011) was a Slovene politician and economist. He served briefly as Prime Minister of Slovenia in the year 2000, and Finance Minister in the centre-right government of Janez Janša between 2004 and 2008. He was founder and first president of the Christian Democratic party called New Slovenia.

Bajuk was born in a Slovene intellectual family in Nazi-occupied Ljubljana. His father Bozidar Bajuk was a classical philologist, and his grandfather Marko Bajuk was the principal of the Bežigrad Grammar School, one of the most prestigious secondary schools in Ljubljana. The Bajuks were acquainted with the famous poet Edvard Kocbek who lived in the same building.

The family left Slovenia in early May 1945, when the Communists took power in Yugoslavia. They spent nearly three years in refugee camps in Lower and Upper Austria before leaving to Argentina with the help of the Slovene refugee relief network set by Ivan Ahčin and Miha Krek. They settled in Mendoza, where Bajuk grew up, studied and started a family.

He received his first degree in economics at Universidad Nacional de Cuyo. He received his first master's degree in a two-year international study program organised by the University of Chicago, receiving the second jointly with his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. He returned to Mendoza, where he taught as a professor at the university. After the military coup in 1976 he was fired and soon left for Washington, D.C., working for the World Bank for a year. He then switched to the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), where he stayed for a number of years. He held a range of positions at the IDB, from economist in charge of analysing social projects to adviser to the executive vice-president. For his last six years in Washington he was in charge of the office of the Presidency of the bank and a member of the board of executive directors of the bank. From September 1994 he was IDB representative for Europe in Paris.


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