Ministry of the Treasury (Argentina)

Ministry of Treasury and Public Finances
Ministerio de Hacienda y Finanzas Públicas

Palacio de Hacienda, headquarters of the Ministry.
Ministry overview
Jurisdiction Argentina
Headquarters Buenos Aires
Employees 4,000 (2009) [1]
Annual budget US$1.7 billion (2009)
Minister responsible
Deputy Minister responsible
Parent department Government of Argentina
Website http://www.economia.gob.ar

The Ministry of the Treasury of the Argentine Nation is a ministry and the treasury of the Argentine federal government.

The current Minister of the Treasury is Nicolás Dujovne.

Headquarters

The Economy Ministry in 1940

The Argentine Ministry of the Treasury has, since the building's 1939 inaugural, been based in a 14-story Rationalist office building designed by local architect Carlos Pibernat. The Economy Ministry building was built on a 0.57 ha (1.4 ac) Montserrat neighborhood lot facing the Casa Rosada presidential office building to the north, and the Defense Ministry (Libertador Building) to the east  a government building also designed by Pibernat.

The building's lobby was decorated with murals painted by the architect's brother, Antonio Pibernat, a post-impressionist painter influenced by the naturalist Barbizon School.[2]

The post has existed on a formal basis since the 1826 inaugural of Bernardino Rivadavia, who named lawmaker Salvador María del Carril as the nation's first official Ministro de Hacienda.[3] The office became among the most powerful in Argentine Government during the generation after 1880, when English Argentine investment, foreign trade, and immigration spurred development. Customs collections (source of over half of public revenues at the time) and the Central Bank were among the responsibilities placed under the Economy Ministry's aegis, and successive ministers' policies were often enacted through presidential decrees.[4]

Its influence grew further when it absorbed the cabinet post of Minister of Public Works in 1991, to help facilitate Economy Minister Domingo Cavallo's privatizations initiative, and, in turn, divested oversight over the nation's goods-producing sectors with the 2008 designation of the Production Ministry by President Cristina Kirchner, in a bid to improve strained relations with the country's agrarian sector following the 2008 Argentine government conflict with the agricultural sector over export tariffs.[5]

The Ministry of the Treasury was appropriated a US$1.7 billion operational budget in 2009, and employed over 4,000 staffers.[6]

List of Ministers since 1946

MinisterPeriodPresident
Nicolás Dujovne31.12.16Mauricio Macri
Alfonso Prat-Gay10.12.15 - 31.12.16
Axel Kicillof18.11.13 - 10.12.15Cristina Fernández de Kirchner
Hernán Lorenzino10.12.11 - 18.11.13
Amado Boudou07.07.09 - 10.12.11
Carlos Fernández25.04.08 - 07.07.09
Martín Lousteau10.12.07 - 24.04.08
Miguel Gustavo Peirano16.07.07 - 10.12.07Néstor Kirchner
Felisa Miceli28.11.05 - 16.07.07
Roberto Lavagna25.05.03 - 27.11.05
Roberto Lavagna27.04.02 - 25.05.03Eduardo Duhalde
Jorge Remes Lenicov01.03.02 - 27.04.02
Rodolfo Frigeri23.12.01 - 30.12.01Adolfo Rodríguez Saá
Jorge Capitanich21.12.01 - 23.12.01Ramón Puerta
Domingo Cavallo20.03.01 - 19.12.01Fernando de la Rúa
Ricardo López Murphy05.03.01 - 19.03.01
José Luis Machinea10.12.99 - 02.03.01
Roque Fernández06.08.96 - 10.12.99Carlos Saúl Menem
Domingo Cavallo01.03.91 - 06.08.96
Antonio Erman González19.12.89 - 04.02.91
Néstor Rapanelli18.07.89 - 18.12.89
Miguel Roig09.07.89 - 17.07.89
Jesús Rodríguez14.05.89 - 08.07.89Raúl Ricardo Alfonsín
Juan Carlos Pugliese31.03.89 - 14.05.89
Juan Vital Sourrouille19.02.85 - 31.03.89
Bernardo Grinspun10.12.83 - 18.02.85
Jorge Wehbe25.08.82 - 09.12.83Reynaldo Bignone
José María Dagnino Pastore02.07.82 - 24.08.82
Roberto Alemann22.12.81 - 30.06.82Leopoldo Fortunato Galtieri
Lorenzo Sigaut01.04.81 - 20.12.81Roberto Viola
José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz29.03.76 - 31.03.81Jorge Rafael Videla
Juan Las Heras24.03.76 - 29.03.76Junta Militar
Emilio Mondelli03.02.76 - 24.03.76María Estela Martínez de Perón
Antonio Cafiero14.08.75 - 03.02.76
Ernesto Corvalán Nanclares11.08.75 - 14.08.75
Pedro Bonanni22.07.75 - 11.08.75
Ernesto Corvalán Nanclares17.07.75 - 22.07.75
Celestino Rodrigo02.06.75 - 17.07.75
Alfredo Gomez Morales21.10.74 - 02.06.75
José Ber Gelbard1.07.74 - 21.10.74
12.10.73 - 1.07.74Juan Domingo Perón
13.07.73 - 12.10.73Raúl Lastiri
25.05.73 - 13.07.73Héctor José Cámpora
Jorge Wehbe13.10.72 - 25.05.73Alejandro Agustín Lanusse
Cayetano Antonio Licciardo11.10.71 - 13.10.72
Juan A. Quilici01.06.71- 11.10.71
Aldo Ferrer26.10.70 - 28.05.71Roberto Marcelo Levingston
Carlos Moyano Llerena18.06.70 - 15.10.70
José Dagnino Pastore11.06.69 - 17.06.70Juan Carlos Onganía
Adalbert Krieger Vasena03.01.67- 11.06.69
Jorge Salimei04.10.66 - 03.01.67
Juan Carlos Pugliese19.08.64 - 28.06.66Arturo Umberto Illia
Eugenio Blanco12.10.63 - 05.08.64
José Alfredo Martínez de Hoz21.05.63 - 12.10.63José María Guido
Eustaquio Méndez Delfino10.12.62 - 13.05.63
Álvaro Alsogaray30.06.62 - 10.12.62
Federico Pinedo (son)06.04.62 - 25.04.62
Jorge Wehbe29.03.62 - 06.04.62
26.03.62 - 06.04.62Arturo Frondizi
Carlos Coll Benegas15.01.62- 26.03.62
Roberto Alemann26.04.61 - 12.01.62
Álvaro Alsogaray25.06.59 - 26.04.61
Emilio Donato del Carril17.06.58 - 24.06.59
Adalberto Krieger Vasena26.03.57 - 01.05.58Pedro Aramburu
Roberto Verrier26.01.57 - 26.03.57
Eugenio Blanco14.11.55 - 25.01.57
Eugenio Folcini24.09.55 - 13.11.55Eduardo Lonardi
Pedro Bonanni04.06.52 - 20.09.55Juan Domingo Perón
Ramón Cereijo04.06.46 - 04.06.52

See also

References

Coordinates: 34°36′34″S 58°22′13″W / 34.60944°S 58.37028°W / -34.60944; -58.37028

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