Luis Alberto Monge | |
---|---|
President of Costa Rica | |
In office 8 May 1982 – 8 May 1986 |
|
Vice President | Alberto Fait Lizano, Armando Aráuz Aguilar |
Preceded by | Rodrigo Carazo Odio |
Succeeded by | Óscar Arias |
Personal details | |
Born |
Luis Alberto Monge Álvarez December 29, 1925 Palmares, Alajuela, Costa Rica |
Died | November 29, 2016 San José, Costa Rica |
(aged 90)
Political party | National Liberation Party |
Spouse(s) | Flora Rojas Alvarez (1946–1960; divorce) Doris Yankelewitz Berger (1965–1988; divorce) |
Luis Alberto Monge Álvarez (December 29, 1925 – November 29, 2016) was the President of Costa Rica from 1982 to 1986. He also served as Costa Rica's first Ambassador to Israel from 1963 until 1966.
Monge was born on December 29, 1925, in Palmares, Alajuela Province, to Gerardo Monge Quesada and Elisa Álvarez Vargas.
He married his first wife, Flora Rojas Alvarez, on March 9, 1946, but the marriage was dissolved in January 1960. He met his second wife, Doris Yankelewitz Berger, while both were attending a luncheon at the University of Costa Rica. At the time, Yankelewitz was a college student while Monge was serving as Ambassador to Israel. Monge and Yankelewitz married at a ceremony in San José on November 25, 1965. They had one daughter, Lena.
Monge and Yankelewitz later separated at the end of his presidency in 1986. The couple divorced in June 1988.
Before becoming President in 1982, Monge served as Costa Rica's first ambassador to Israel from 1963 to 1966 and was one of the founding members of the National Liberation Party (PLN) in 1951. He was also named a deputy in the Legislative Assembly, at age 24, making him one of the youngest to have reached such rank.
Monge inherited an impoverished and distraught nation. The biggest issues his presidency dealt with were: the unmanageable economic crisis, the mounting foreign debt and the Sandinista-Contra crisis involving Nicaragua, the United States and Costa Rica's northern border region.
In dealing with the country's economic situation, he began austere programs on public spending, eliminated many government subsidies to various activities and promoted exports and receptive tourism. He eliminated export and production taxes. Monge also reformed monetary law, and forced all foreign currencies to go through the national bank system. A lot of his efforts paid off, reducing inflation and unemployment. During Monge's term, Costa Rica declared an alignment with all "western democracies" and began to work closely with the governments of Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala, while its relationship with Nicaragua continued to deteriorate.