fiction.wikisort.org - WriterHerman Onno Christiaan Rudolf "Onno" Ruding (born 15 August 1939) is a retired Dutch politician of the Christian Democratic Appeal (CDA) party and businessman.[1]
Dutch politician
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Onno Ruding |
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 Onno Ruding in 1985 |
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In office 1 February 1990 – 21 March 1992 |
Chairman | Theo Quené |
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In office 3 June 1986 – 14 juli 1986 |
Parliamentary group | Christian Democratic Appeal |
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In office 4 November 1982 – 7 November 1989 |
Prime Minister | Ruud Lubbers |
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Preceded by | Fons van der Stee |
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Succeeded by | Wim Kok |
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Born | (1939-08-15) 15 August 1939 (age 82) Breda, Netherlands |
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Political party | Christian Democratic Appeal (from 1980) |
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Other political affiliations | Catholic People's Party (1967–1980) |
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Spouse(s) | |
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Children | 3 daughters |
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Residence(s) | Wassenaar, Netherlands |
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Alma mater | Erasmus University Rotterdam (Bachelor of Economics, Master of Economics, Doctor of Philosophy) |
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Occupation | Politician · Civil servant · Economist · Researcher · Businessman · Banker · Financial adviser · Financial analyst · Corporate director · Nonprofit director · Trade association executive · Author · Lobbyist |
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Allegiance | Netherlands |
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Branch/service | Royal Netherlands Army |
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Years of service | 1964–1965 (Conscription) 1965–1969 (Reserve) |
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Rank | Corporal |
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Unit | Regiment van Heutsz |
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Battles/wars | Cold War |
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Ruding worked as student researcher at the Erasmus University Rotterdam from June 1964 until July 1969 and worked as a civil servant for the Ministry of Finance from February 1965 until June 1971 and as Deputy Director-General of the department for International Monetary Affairs from February 1965 until September 1966 and Director-General of the Department for International Monetary Affairs from September 1966 until June 1971. Ruding worked as an investment banker for the AMRO Bank from June 1971 until January 1977. In December 1976 Ruding was nominated as an Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), taking office on 1 January 1977. In December 1980 Ruding was nominated as CFO and Vice Chairman of the Board of directors of the AMRO Bank, he resigned as Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund on 31 December 1980 and was installed as CFO and Vice Chairman of the AMRO Bank on 1 January 1981.
After the election of 1982 Ruding was appointed as Minister of Finance in the Cabinet Lubbers I, taking office on 4 November 1982. Ruding was elected as a Member of the House of Representatives after the election of 1986, taking office on 3 June 1986. Following the cabinet formation of 1986 Ruding continued as Minister of Finance in the Cabinet Lubbers II, taking office on 14 July 1986. On 3 May 1989 the Cabinet Lubbers II fell and continued to serve in a demissionary capacity. In July 1989 Ruding announced that he would not stand for the election of 1989. The Cabinet Lubbers II was replaced by the Cabinet Lubbers III on 7 November 1989. Ruding retired from active politics and returned to the private sector and public sector, in December 1989 Ruding was nominated as a Chairman of the Christian Employers' association (NCW), taking office on 1 January 1990. In February 1992 Ruding was nominated as Vice Chairman of the Board of directors of Citigroup, he resigned as Chairman of the Christian Employers' association on 21 March 1992 the same day he was installed as Vice Chairman of the Board of directors of Citigroup. In December 1999 Ruding was appointed as COO of Citibank Europe, serving from 1 January 2000 until 1 October 2003.
Following his retirement Ruding remains active in the private sector and public sector and continues to occupy numerous seats as a corporate director and nonprofit director on several supervisory boards (Centre for European Policy Studies, Society for Statistics and Operations Research, NIBC Bank, International Statistical Institute and the Tinbergen Institute).
Decorations
Honours |
Ribbon bar | Honour | Country | Date | Comment |
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Grand Officer of the Order of the Oak Crown |
Luxembourg |
15 November 1983 |
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Grand Officer of the Order of the Crown |
Belgium |
4 April 1984 |
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Knight of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre |
Holy See |
10 December 1985 |
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Knight Commander of the Order of Merit |
Germany |
21 March 1986 |
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Commander of the Legion of Honour |
France |
7 February 1987 |
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Commander of the Order of Orange-Nassau |
Netherlands |
20 November 1989 |
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Knight Grand Cross of the Order of Merit |
Italy |
18 July 1994 |
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Knight of the Order of the Netherlands Lion |
Netherlands |
1 October 2004 |
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References
External links
- Official
Political offices
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Preceded by Fons van der Stee |
Minister of Finance 1982–1989 |
Succeeded by Wim Kok |
Civic offices |
Preceded by Unknown |
Deputy Director-General of the Department for International Monetary Affairs of the Ministry of Finance 1965–1966 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Preceded by Unknown |
Director-General of the Department for International Monetary Affairs of the Ministry of Finance 1966–1967 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Diplomatic posts
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Preceded by Unknown |
Executive Director for Benelux, Israel and Eastern Europe of the International Monetary Fund 1977–1980 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Business positions |
Preceded by Unknown |
CFO and Vice Chairman of the Board of directors of the AMRO Bank 1981–1982 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Preceded by |
Chairman of the Christian Employers' association 1990–1992 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Preceded by Unknown |
Vice Chairman of the Board of directors of Citigroup 1992–2000 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Preceded by Unknown |
COO of Citibank Europe 2000–2003 |
Succeeded by Unknown |
Non-profit organization positions |
Preceded by Unknown |
Chairman of the Supervisory board of the Centre for European Policy Studies 2003–present |
Incumbent |
Ministers of Finance of the Netherlands |
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Ministry of Finance |
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Second Lubbers cabinet (1986–1989) |
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- Preceded by: First Lubbers cabinet
- Succeeded by: Third Lubbers cabinet
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Prime Minister |
- Ruud Lubbers (General Affairs)
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Deputy Prime Minister |
- Rudolf de Korte (Economic Affairs)
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Ministers |
- Kees van Dijk (Interior) (1986–1987)
- Jan de Koning (Interior and Netherlands Antilles and Aruba Affairs) (Ad interim)
- Kees van Dijk (Interior) (from 1987)
- Hans van den Broek (Foreign Affairs)
- Onno Ruding (Finance)
- Frits Korthals Altes (Justice)
- Wim van Eekelen (Defence) (1986–1988)
- Piet Bukman (Defence) (ad interim)
- Frits Bolkestein (Defence) (from 1988)
- Elco Brinkman (Welfare, Health and Culture)
- Jan de Koning (Social Affairs and Employment and Netherlands Antilles and Aruba Affairs) (1986–1987)
- Louw de Graaf (Social Affairs and Employment) (Ad interim)
- Jan de Koning (Social Affairs and Employment and Netherlands Antilles and Aruba Affairs) (from 1987)
- Wim Deetman (Education and Sciences) (1986–1989)
- Gerrit Braks (Education and Sciences) (Ad interim)
- Neelie Kroes (Transport and Water Management)
- Gerrit Braks (Agriculture and Fisheries)
- Ed Nijpels (Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment)
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Minister without portfolio |
- Piet Bukman (Development Cooperation)
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State Secretaries |
- Dieuwke de Graaff-Nauta (Interior)
- René van der Linden (Foreign Affairs) (1986–1988)
- Berend-Jan van Voorst tot Voorst (Foreign Affairs) (from 1988)
- Henk Koning (Finance)
- Virginie Korte-van Hemel (Justice)
- Enneüs Heerma (Economic Affairs) (1986)
- Yvonne van Rooy (Economic Affairs) (from 1986)
- Albert-Jan Evenhuis (Economic Affairs) (1986–1989)
- Jan van Houwelingen (Defence)
- Dick Dees (Welfare, Health and Culture)
- Louw de Graaf (Social Affairs and Employment)
- Nell Ginjaar-Maas (Education and Sciences)
- Gerrit Brokx (Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment) (1986)
- Enneüs Heerma (Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment) (from 1986)
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First Lubbers cabinet (1982–1986) |
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- Preceded by: Third Van Agt cabinet
- Succeeded by: Second Lubbers cabinet
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Prime Minister |
- Ruud Lubbers (General Affairs)
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Deputy Prime Minister |
- Gijs van Aardenne (Economic Affairs)
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Ministers |
- Koos Rietkerk (Interior) (1982–1986) (†)
- Frits Korthals Altes (Interior) (Ad interim)
- Rudolf de Korte (Interior) (from 1986)
- Hans van den Broek (Foreign Affairs)
- Onno Ruding (Finance)
- Frits Korthals Altes (Justice)
- Job de Ruiter (Defence)
- Elco Brinkman (Welfare, Health and Culture)
- Jan de Koning (Social Affairs and Employment and Netherlands Antilles and Aruba Affairs)
- Wim Deetman (Education and Sciences)
- Neelie Kroes (Transport and Water Management)
- Gerrit Braks (Agriculture and Fisheries)
- Pieter Winsemius (Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment)
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Minister without portfolio |
- Eegje Schoo (Development Cooperation)
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State Secretaries |
- Marius van Amelsvoort (Interior)
- Wim van Eekelen (Foreign Affairs)
- Henk Koning (Finance)
- Virginie Korte-van Hemel (Justice)
- Piet van Zeil (Economic Affairs)
- Frits Bolkestein (Economic Affairs)
- Jan van Houwelingen (Defence)
- Charl Schwietert (Defence) (1982)
- Willem Hoekzema (Defence) (from 1982)
- Joop van der Reijden (Welfare, Health and Culture)
- Louw de Graaf (Social Affairs and Employment)
- Annelien Kappeyne van de Coppello (Social Affairs and Employment)
- Nell Ginjaar-Maas (Education and Sciences)
- Gerard van Leijenhorst (Education and Sciences)
- Jaap Scherpenhuizen (Transport and Water Management)
- Ad Ploeg (Agriculture and Fisheries)
- Gerrit Brokx (Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment)
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Authority control  |
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General | |
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National libraries | |
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