Juan Carlos Hurtado Miller

Juan Carlos Hurtado Miller
Prime Minister of Peru
In office
28 July 1990 – 15 February 1991
PresidentAlberto Fujimori
Preceded byGuillermo Larco Cox
Succeeded byCarlos Torres y Torres Lara
Minister of Economy and Finance
In office
28 July 1990 – 15 February 1991
PresidentAlberto Fujimori
Prime MinisterHimself
Preceded byCésar Vásquez Bazán
Succeeded byCarlos Boloña Behr
Minister of Industry, Tourism, Integration and International Trade Negotiations
In office
13 October 1999 – 28 July 2000
PresidentAlberto Fujimori
Prime MinisterAlberto Bustamante Belaúnde
Preceded byGustavo Caillaux Zazzali
Succeeded byGonzalo Romero de la Puente
Minister of Agriculture
In office
3 August 1983 – 28 July 1985
PresidentFernando Belaúnde Terry
Prime Minister Fernando Schwalb López-Aldana
Sandro Mariátegui Chiappe
Luis Pércovich Roca
Preceded byMirko Cuculiza Torre
Succeeded byAugusto Barturén Dueñas
Personal details
Born
Juan Carlos Hurtado Miller

(1940-11-16) 16 November 1940 (age 83)
Lima, Peru
Political partyCambio 90
New Majority
Vamos Vecino
Other political
affiliations
Popular Action
Alma materNational Agrarian University La Molina

Juan Carlos Hurtado Miller (born 16 November 1940) is a Peruvian former engineer and Fujimorist politician who served in the cabinet during the presidency of Fernando Belaúnde Terry and Alberto Fujimori in which, he served as Fujimori's first Prime Minister of Peru from 1990 to 1991 and was the Minister of Agriculture during the presidency of Fernando Belaúnde Terry between 1983 and 1985.

Early life and education

Juan Carlos Hurtado was born on 16 November 1940 in Lima. His parents were former Minister of Health Alberto Hurtado Abadía and Lily Miller Maertens. He is the first cousin of former First Lady Violeta Correa Miller, wife of President Fernando Belaúnde Terry and daughter of former Foreign Minister Javier Correa Elías as well as a relative of Augusto Blacker Miller.

He completed his school studies at the Colegio Sagrados Corazones Recoleta.

He entered the National Agrarian University La Molina, where he studied agricultural engineering. He received a master's degree in Agricultural Economics at the University of Iowa. He also received a master's degree in public administration at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He was an assistant researcher at the Harvard Institute for International Development.

He was coordinator of the Fondo de Financiamiento de Estudios de Proyectos de Inversión (FINEPI).

He married Leonor de Asín Puyo.

Political career

He worked as an agricultural programmer for the National Planning Institute.

In the Second Government of President Fernando Belaúnde Terry he was chairman of the board of the Banco Agrario del Perú, director of the Central Reserve Bank of Peru, president of the Corporación Financiera de Desarrollo (COFIDE).

He was a member of the board of directors of Banco Industrial del Perú.

On 4 August 1983, he was appointed as Minister of Agriculture by President Fernando Belaúnde Terry. During his tenure as minister, the creation of CERTEX for non-traditional exports was approved. He remained in office until the end of the government in 1985.

On 28 July 1990, newly elected President Alberto Fujimori appointed him as Prime Minister of Peru and also at the same time as Minister of Economy and Finance.

As minister he was in charge of the announcement of the "Fujishock", a measure that proposed a restructuring of prices to control inflation. He resigned from office in February 1991 following the publication of an alternative economic stabilization program, the continuing failure to fight inflation and the crisis caused by a cholera epidemic.

He ran for mayor of Lima in the 1998 local elections under the Vamos Vecino party, losing to Alberto Andrade, who was re-elected for a second term.

On 13 October 1999, he returned to the Fujimori government as Minister of Industry, Tourism, Integration and International Trade Negotiations. He remained in the ministry until 28 July 2000.

He was accused of receiving funds for his electoral campaign from Intelligence chief Vladimiro Montesinos, for which he went into hiding in 2000. The delivery of these funds is documented in a vladi-videos secretly filmed by Vladimiro Montesinos.[1] Surprisingly, he was handed over to justice on 13 April 2011.[2]

References

  1. ^ "Video: Hurtado Miller financió campaña con dinero de Montesinos" (in Spanish). La República. 16 April 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
  2. ^ "Juan Carlos Hurtado Miller se entrega a la justicia" (in Spanish). RPP. 13 April 2011. Retrieved 11 October 2020.
Political offices
Preceded by Prime Minister of Peru
1990–1991
Succeeded by
Carlos Torres y Torres Lara
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