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Rodrigo Rato

Spanish politician and banker

Rodrigo Rato

Summary

Spanish politician and banker

FieldValue
nameRodrigo Rato
imageRodrigo_de_Rato_y_Figaredo.jpg
officeManaging Director of the
International Monetary Fund
term_start7 June 2004
term_end1 November 2007
predecessorHorst Köhler
successorDominique Strauss-Kahn
office1First Deputy Prime Minister of Spain
primeminister1José María Aznar
term_start13 September 2003
term_end117 April 2004
predecessor1Mariano Rajoy
successor1María Teresa Fernández de la Vega
office2Minister of Economy of Spain
primeminister2José María Aznar
term_start227 April 2000
term_end217 April 2004
predecessor2Position established
successor2Pedro Solbes
office3Second Deputy Prime Minister of Spain
primeminister3José María Aznar
term_start36 May 1996
term_end34 September 2003
predecessor3Juan Antonio García Díez
successor3Javier Arenas
office4Minister of Economy and Finance of Spain
primeminister4José María Aznar
term_start45 May 1996
term_end427 April 2000
predecessor4Pedro Solbes
successor4Cristóbal Montoro (Finance)
office5Member of the Congress of Deputies
term_start521 November 1989
term_end512 May 2004
constituency5Madrid
term_start628 October 1982
term_end621 November 1989
constituency6Cádiz
birth_nameRodrigo de Rato y Figaredo
birth_date
birth_placeMadrid, Spain
partyPeople's Party
spouse
children3
relativesRamón Rato (Father)
educationComplutense University
University of California, Berkeley
captionRato in 2004

International Monetary Fund University of California, Berkeley Rodrigo de Rato y Figaredo (born 18 March 1949) is a businessman and politician who served in the Council of Ministers of Spain from 1996 to 2004. He also served as the ninth managing director of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) from 2004 to 2007 and the president of Bankia from 2010 to 2012.

Rato was arrested on 16 April 2015 for alleged fraud, embezzlement and money laundering. His case was still awaiting trial a year later when his name appeared in the Panama Papers.

On 23 February 2017, Rato was found guilty of embezzlement of about 100,000 euros from Bankia, the bank where he worked, in the case of the so-called "black cards". He was sentenced to 4½ years' imprisonment. In September 2018, the sentence was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Spain, and Rato entered prison on 25 October 2018.

Early life and education

Rodrigo de Rato was born in Madrid, into a rich textile-owning family from Asturias. He is the great-grandson of politician Faustino Rodríguez-San Pedro y Díaz-Argüelles and the son of businessman Ramón Rato who was jailed in 1967 for tax evasion to Switzerland through his Banco Siero, and of Aurora Figaredo Sela. Both the Rato and the Figaredo sides of his family owned industries and nobility titles. Rato attended a Jesuit school Our Lady of Remembrance College, Madrid before studying law in the Complutense University.

In 1971 Rato went to University of California, Berkeley, and received an MBA in 1974 from the Haas School of Business.

Career

Early beginnings

In 1975 Rato became involved in the family business, first in Fuensanta, an Asturian mineral water company, and then in two Madrid construction firms. He also became involved in expanding the Cadena Rato chain of radio stations.

In 1977 Rato joined the newly formed Popular Alliance (AP), a party containing former ministers of Franco, founded by Manuel Fraga, a close personal friend of his father. In December 1979 Rato was elected to the national executive committee, and became secretary of the AP economic commission. In February 1981 he became one of the party's five Secretaries-General, and was considered to be their economic expert. He supported tight controls on public spending, and an emphasis on the supply side of economics. In October 1982 he won election as an AP member of the Congress of Deputies for Cádiz in spite of having no connection to this Andalucian town. He represented the area until 1989 and subsequently represented Madrid from 1989 to 2000.

The 1982 election handed a loss to the AP, and marked the beginning of the long rule of the PSOE and Felipe González. Until 1984 Rato was the Secretary of the parliamentary group. He then became their economic affairs spokesman where he impressed the party with his attacks on the PSOE's economic policies. He was seen to be on the liberal wing of the party.

When Fraga resigned from the leadership in December 1986 Rato backed Miguel Herrero y Rodríguez de Miñón who lost the leadership race to Antonio Hernández Mancha, but managed to keep his positions within the party. During these years he also continued his business career in Aguas de Fuensanta; having previously been the CEO of the company from 1978 to 1982, he served as chairman from 1985 to 1991. In June 1989 Fraga again became interim President after the generally acknowledged failure of the leadership of Hernández Mancha. The party became the slightly more inclusive People's Party (PP). Rato was given shared responsibility over the elections with Francisco Álvarez-Cascos Fernández, the new party Secretary General. He was a close supporter of José María Aznar, who was voted as the new PP leader on 4 September.

Rodrigo de Rato (R), Turkey's Minister of Economy [[Ali Babacan]] (C), and [[World Bank]] President [[Paul Wolfowitz]] (L) shake hands after signing the memorandum of understanding for the 2009 IMF-World Bank Annual Meetings to be held in [[Turkey]].

On 29 October, the PP lost the general election, though his role in the campaign gave him national prominence. Afterwards he was appointed party spokesman. On 2 April 1990 his father sold the family stake in Cadena Rato for 5 billion pesetas. In June 1991 he stopped being President of Fuensanta, but remained on the board until 1993. On 6 June that year the PP lost another general election to PSOE. In the 12th National Congress in January 1996 he was confirmed as one of the three vice secretaries of the party.

Minister of Economy and vice president

Then on 3 March 1996 the PP won the general election. On 4 May Aznar became Prime Minister of Spain, and on 6 May Rato became both second Vice President and Minister of Economy and Finance. On 12 March 2000 the PP won again, this time with an absolute majority. His ministries were reorganised, and he gave all his responsibilities to Cristóbal Montoro Romero who became Minister of Finance. In his second term he had to fend off various charges of incompatibility between his public office and his private business interests.

Managing Director of the IMF

Rato became the managing director of the IMF on 7 June 2004, taking over from Anne Krueger, who had been acting as temporary Managing Director after Horst Köhler, who at that time was nominated (and later elected) President of Germany, resigned the post 4 March 2004.

In June 2007 Rato announced that he would resign from his post the following October, citing personal reasons. On 28 September 2007, the International Monetary Fund's 24 executive directors elected former French Minister for Economics, Finance, and Industry, Dominique Strauss-Kahn, over former Czech Prime Minister Josef Tošovský, to be the new managing director in succession to Rato.

Career in the private sector

Bankia

Rato assumed the presidency of Caja Madrid in 2010, a public savings bank based in the Community of Madrid, and after a merger with other six saving banks he assumed the presidency of the new group now called Bankia. On 7 May 2012, he resigned amid growing concerns about the solvency of the bank. Although the core capital ratio was 10,4%, the Popular Party Government planned to lend about 8 billion euro to the bank to increase its solvency, as was done before throughout Europe (e.g. ING and Northern Rock crisis). Due to his political ties to the governing PP, which decided to inject the funds, Rato resigned. He had his salary cut from €2.3 million to €600,000 annually in 2011 due to new laws for rescued banks.

Other activities

  • International Airlines Group (IAG), Member of the Board of Directors
  • Mapfre, Member of the Board of Directors (2010–2012)

Arrest and conviction

On 4 July 2012, Rato, along with 30 other former members of the board of directors of Bankia, were charged with accounting irregularities. Bloomberg Businessweek listed Rato as the worst CEO in 2012. In 2011, Bankia had announced profits of €309 million; after Rato resigned, the figure was amended to €3 billion in losses. In October 2014, it became known that between 24 October 2010 to 28 November 2011, Rato made 519 purchases with a secret corporate credit card, spending a total of €99,041. Among these purchases he spent in one day were €3,547 in alcoholic beverages and €1,000 in shoes, along with 16 cash withdrawals of more than €1,000, most of them during the last months of his presidential term.

After a hearing 17 October 2014, the Spanish High Court judge Fernando Andreu assigned civil responsibility for the credit card abuse to Rodrigo Rato and Miguel Blesa. Rato was ordered to pay a bond of €3 million, and was expelled from the People's Party (PP).

The case went to court in 2016. On 23 February 2017, Rato was convicted and sentenced to four and a half years in prison. In September 2018, the sentence was confirmed by the Supreme Court of Spain, and Rato entered prison on 25 October 2018. He was held in solitary confinement under the FIES regime. In 2020, the High Court acquitted Rato in a separate trial over falsifying accounts and other charges in the listing of Bankia when he was the bank’s chairman. It later granted him a semi-release which allowed him to serve the rest of his sentence in partial liberty.

In December 2024, Rato was sentenced to a four-year jail term over tax crimes, corruption and money laundering committed in Spain during his tenure as head of Bankia. He was also fined more than two million euros and ordered to return 568,413 euros to Spain's tax authorities. Rato said he would appeal.

Personal life

Rodrigo Rato has been married to Alicia González, a journalist from the newspaper El País, since 2015.

References

References

  1. [http://www.rtve.es/noticias/20150416/registro-domicilio-rodrigo-rato/1131140.shtml «Rato, detenido en el registro de su vivienda en Madrid por supuestos delitos de fraude y blanqueo.»] [[RTVE]]. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  2. . (16 April 2015). ["Spanish police search home and off ex-IMF chief Rodrigo Rato"](https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-32335842).
  3. (18 April 2016). "Rodrigo Rato dejó a deber dinero incluso a la Hacienda de Panamá".
  4. (23 January 2017). "Former IMF chief gets four years in jail for embezzlement in Spain". The Guardian.
  5. "El Supremo confirma la condena de 4 años y seis meses de cárcel para Rodrigo Rato por las tarjetas black". eldiario.es.
  6. [https://www.elmundo.es/economia/2018/10/25/5bd1a0a3468aeb546e8b45b5.html Rodrigo Rato ingresa en la prisión de Soto del Real: "Pido perdón a la sociedad"] {{in lang. es
  7. [https://web.archive.org/web/20181025175533/https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-spain-corruption/ex-imf-head-rodrigo-rato-starts-jail-term-in-black-cards-case-idUKKCN1MZ21A Ex-IMF head Rodrigo Rato starts jail term in 'black cards' case]
  8. El único que dijo 'no' a la tarjeta black, Francisco Verdú. [http://www.elmundo.es/cronica/2015/03/01/54f19d74ca474116028b456e.html]. [[El Mundo (España). El Mundo]], J. CASTRO VILLACAÑAS, 1 March 2015. Consultado el 9 de mayo de 2018.
  9. link. (29 June 2012 ''La Voz de Asturias''.)
  10. [https://web.archive.org/web/20080120181651/http://tematico.asturias.es/cultura/ridea/fondosFigaredo.html Fondos Familia Figaredo (Real Instituto de Estudios Asturianos).]
  11. Horcajo, Xavier. (20 October 2001). "Economía concedió una subvención de 22 millones a Aguas de Fuensanta". [[El País]].
  12. (7 May 2012). "Rato dimite como presidente de Bankia". El Pais.
  13. "Rodrigo Rato pasa de ganar 2,3 millones a 600.000 euros". El Mundo.
  14. [http://www.iairgroup.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=240949&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1494053&highlight= Board of Directors] [[International Airlines Group]] (IAG).
  15. "The Worst CEOs of 2012". Businessweek.
  16. (17 October 2014). "Ex-IMF chief ordered to post €3m bond over Caja Madrid card abuse". El Pais.
  17. [http://politica.elpais.com/politica/2014/10/27/actualidad/1414438407_470356.html El PP da de baja a Rato y a los 12 militantes de las tarjetas opacas]. ''El País'' (27 October 2014).
  18. (23 January 2017). "Former IMF chief gets four years in jail for embezzlement in Spain". The Guardian.
  19. "El Supremo confirma la condena de 4 años y seis meses de cárcel para Rodrigo Rato por las tarjetas black". eldiario.es.
  20. [https://www.elmundo.es/economia/2018/10/25/5bd1a0a3468aeb546e8b45b5.html Rodrigo Rato ingresa en la prisión de Soto del Real: "Pido perdón a la sociedad"] {{in lang. es
  21. [https://web.archive.org/web/20181025175533/https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-spain-corruption/ex-imf-head-rodrigo-rato-starts-jail-term-in-black-cards-case-idUKKCN1MZ21A Ex-IMF head Rodrigo Rato starts jail term in 'black cards' case]
  22. (15 January 2019). "Interior incluye a los 15 presos de las black en un fichero de reclusos de "especial seguimiento"". El País.
  23. Jesús Aguado and Emma Pinedo (October 1, 2020), [https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSKBN26M6OX Former IMF chief Rato to leave Spanish prison on semi-release from embezzlement sentence] ''[[Reuters]]''.
  24. Aguado, Jesús. (2024-12-20). "Ex-IMF chief Rato sentenced to new prison term over corruption". Reuters.
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