Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
economics

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Ivan Kostov

Prime Minister of Bulgaria from 1997 to 2001


Summary

Prime Minister of Bulgaria from 1997 to 2001

FieldValue
nameIvan Kostov
native_nameИван Костов
native_name_langbg
imageIvan Kostov 2013 05(cropped).jpg
captionKostov in 2013
officePrime Minister of Bulgaria
term_start21 May 1997
term_end24 July 2001
deputyEvgeni Bakardzhiev
Veselin Metodiev
Alexander Bozhkov
presidentPetar Stoyanov
predecessorStefan Sofiyanski
successorSimeon Sakskoburggotski
office1Minister of Finance
term_start120 December 1990
term_end130 December 1992
primeminister1Dimitar Popov
Philip Dimitrov
predecessor1Belcho Belchev
successor1Stoyan Alexandrov
contyes
titlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey;
embedyes
officeLeader of the Democrats for Strong Bulgaria
term_start30 May 2004
term_end13 May 2013
predecessorPosition established
successorRadan Kanev
office1Leader of the Union of Democratic Forces
term_start129 December 1994
term_end126 June 2001
predecessor1Philip Dimitrov
successor1Ekaterina Mihaylova
contyes
lastyes
titlestyleborder:1px dashed lightgrey;
embedyes
officeMember of the National Assembly
term_start5 July 2001
term_end14 March 2013
constituency16th MMC - Plovdiv
(2001-2005)
23rd MMC - Sofia
(2005-2013)
term_start112 January 1995
term_end121 May 1997
constituency116th MMC - Plovdiv
office2Member of the 7th Grand National Assembly
term_start210 July 1990
term_end220 December 1990
predecessor2Position established
successor2Position abolished }}
birth_nameIvan Yordanov Kostov
birth_date
birth_placeSofia, PR Bulgaria
partyDemocrats for a Strong Bulgaria (since 2004)
otherpartyUnion of Democratic Forces (until 2003)
spouse
children2
alma_materUniversity of National and World Economy
Sofia University
occupation

Veselin Metodiev Alexander Bozhkov Philip Dimitrov | Senior political offices | Parliamentary offices (2001-2005) 23rd MMC - Sofia (2005-2013) Sofia University Ivan Yordanov Kostov ( ) (born 23 December 1949) is a Bulgarian politician who served as Prime Minister of Bulgaria from 1997 to 2001. A member of the SDS party, which he led from 1994 to 2001, he was previously Minister of Finance from 1990 to 1992. Following his premiership, Kostov founded a new political party, the DSB, and served as Member of the National Assembly from 2001 to 2013.

Ivan Kostov graduated in Economics from the Karl Marx Higher Institute of Economics (today's University of National and World Economy) in Sofia in 1974, and later earned a Ph.D. in Mathematical Modeling of Economic Processes from Sofia University. He then worked as an associate professor at Sofia Technical University and entered politics after the collapse of the Berlin Wall and the fall of the Bulgarian communist leader, Todor Zhivkov. Kostov became an economic expert for the Union of Democratic Forces (UDF). His political career began as Member of Parliament in the 7th Grand National Assembly in 1990 (he was an MP from 1990 to 2013) and he went on to become Bulgaria's Finance Minister in the two consecutive governments of Dimitar Popov (December 1990 – October 1991) and Filip Dimitrov (November 1991 – December 1992).

Chairman of the UDF and Prime Minister

Kostov was elected chairman of the UDF in 1994. During the winter of 1996/1997, mass protests took place against Bulgarian Socialist Party's government. The causes for the complete crisis were hyperinflation, unemployment and food shortages. The protests ultimately led to the fall of the socialist government. The UDF won the May 1997 elections, and Kostov became Bulgaria's Prime Minister, his cabinet eventually became the country's first post-communist government to serve its full 4-year term.

Kostov and his government implemented the currency board in Bulgaria, removed price controls and created a market economy, which put it on the path of sustainable economic growth. Under his government, other economic reforms were carried out, including privatization of state-owned enterprises on a large scale and the country started long-sought accession talks with the European Union (which Bulgaria joined on 1 January 2007).

In foreign affairs, Ivan Kostov followed a strongly pro-EU and pro-NATO course, putting the country on a firm path of integration with the EU and NATO. As a part of the pro-NATO stance of his government, during the war in Kosovo he showed leadership by allowing NATO but not Russia to use Bulgaria's airspace despite overwhelming opposition in Bulgaria to the NATO air campaign against Yugoslavia and daily protest marches led by the Bulgarian Socialist Party (the former Bulgarian Communist Party). This single act prevented Russia from resupplying its forces occupying Pristina airport, thus denying the Russians a foothold in Kosovo. This decision ensured the success of the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia and the Kosovo War and ultimately led to a visit to Sofia by US President Bill Clinton in 1999. Against the insistence of the United States, Kostov didn't allow refugees from Kosovo to enter Bulgaria, but arranged for them to be temporarily settled in the Republic of Macedonia instead.

Kostov's rule was characterized by media claims for massive corruption, none of which have been proven. A number of major Soviet era enterprises that were already bankrupt and in the process of liquidation were sold to the highest bidder below the price of their assets because of the tremendous debts these enterprises had. This was done to allow the new investor to save the jobs of the employees, who would otherwise have to immediately lose their job because these enterprises were in a procedure of liquidation to pay off their creditors. This sale under the book value of assets has been misused by critics of Kostov's government since in unfounded accusations of corruption. While successful in stabilizing the country, Bulgaria's current account balance started growing negative.

Some of Kostov's privatization policies were criticized by his opponents from the Bulgarian Socialist Party. Ultimately the UDF lost in the June 2001 election to the newly formed National Movement Simeon II. Kostov resigned as chair of the UDF and eventually left the party to establish, in 2004, a new political party, Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria (DSB). He chaired DSB until June 2013.

Support for Fiscal Rules

In 2010, the GERB government of Prime Minister Boyko Borisov proposed instituting a tight fiscal rule in the Bulgarian Constitution, namely that the budget deficit could not exceed 2% of GDP in any one year. The proposal was supported by Ivan Kostov and his party Democrats for a Strong Bulgaria and Parliament adopted it in November 2010. Kostov's DSB supported several other initiatives by GERB's government, including the ban on smoking in public places, and the pension reform proposed by Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov.

Personal

He is married to Elena Kostova. Kostov's hobby is tennis and he is also an avid follower of chess.

References

Bibliography

  • {{Cite book

References

  1. "Българска национална телевизия - Новини - Политика - Радан Кънев е новият лидер на ДСБ".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Ivan Kostov — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report