- David Klein (economist)
-
- For other persons with the same name, see David Klein. For the cinematographer and actor, see Dave Klein.
David Klein (Hebrew: דוד קליין; born 1935) served as the governor of the Bank of Israel from January 2000 to January 2005.[1][2]
Klein received his higher education at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, obtaining a BA in 1959 in general history and economics. In 1971 he obtained his PhD in economics from George Washington University in the United States.
Career
During 1959-1966 he served in the budget department of the Israel Ministry of Finance. In addition to oversight and planning duties, he was involved with the establishment of the town of Arad and the reconstruction of the town of Qazvin in Iran after an earthquake.
During 1966-1972 Klein served at the International Monetary Fund in the Fiscal Affairs Department with responsibility for fiscal policy in developing countries.
During 1972-1976 he was with Tevel Institute of Policy Studies in Jerusalem where he worked on econometrics.
During 1976-1987 he worked for the Bank Leumi Le-Israel, serving in positions such as senior economist and head of the strategic planning division.
During 1987-2005 Klein served in various senior roles at the Bank of Israel, being a member of the management team.
During 2000-2005 he was the Governor of the Bank of Israel.
References
- ^ Orme Jr., William A. (17 January 2000). Choice for Israel Bank Chief Approved by a Split Cabinet, The New York Times
- ^ Reuters (10 January 2005). Israel Asks Citigroup Official to Run Its Bank, The New York Times
a
External links
Governor of the Bank of Israel David Horowitz (1954-71) · Moshe Sanbar (1971-76) · Arnon Gafni (1976-81) · Moshe Mendelbaum (1982-86) · Michael Bruno (1986-91) · Jacob A. Frenkel (1991-2000) · David Klein (2000-04) · Stanley Fischer (2004-)Categories:- Governors of the Bank of Israel
- 1935 births
- Living people
- Israeli economists
- Israeli civil servants
- George Washington University alumni
- Israeli businesspeople
- Bankers
- Israeli Jews
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.