- Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship (Croatia)
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Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship Agency overview Jurisdiction Government of Croatia Headquarters Ulica Grada Vukovara 78, Zagreb, Croatia
45°47′59″N 15°58′38″E / 45.799747°N 15.977114°ECoordinates: 45°47′59″N 15°58′38″E / 45.799747°N 15.977114°EAnnual budget 38 billion HRK (2010)[1] Minister responsible Đuro Popijač Website mingorp.hr The Ministry of Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship of the Republic of Croatia (Croatian: Ministarstvo gospodarstva, rada i poduzetništva or MINGORP) is the ministry in the Government of Croatia which is in charge of the development of the economy, investments and labour regulation.
Contents
List of ministers
Minister Party Term start Term end Ivan Čermak Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 20 May 1993 12 October 1993 Nadan Vidošević Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 12 October 1993 18 September 1995 Zlatko Mateša Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 18 September 1995 7 November 1995 Davor Štern Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 7 November 1995 14 April 1997 Nenad Porges Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 15 April 1997 27 January 2000 Goranko Fižulić Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS) 27 January 2000 21 March 2002 Hrvoje Vojković Croatian Social Liberal Party (HSLS) 21 March 2002 30 July 2002 Ljubo Jurčić Non-party 30 July 2002 23 December 2003 Branko Vukelić Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 23 December 2003 12 January 2008 Damir Polančec Croatian Democratic Union (HDZ) 12 January 2008 30 October 2009 Đuro Popijač Non-party / HDZ since 25 August 2010[2] 19 November 2009 Incumbent Origins
The Ministry of Economy was not included as such in the first four Croatian Governments. The Cabinet of Stjepan Mesić and the Cabinet of Josip Manolić included the minister for social planning (Croatian: društveno planiranje; post held by Stjepan Zdunić) and the minister of energy and industry (Croatian: energetika i industrija; Božo Udovičić). In the Cabinet of Franjo Gregurić, the former minister became the minister of economic development (Croatian: gospodarski razvitak), and there was also a minister of trade (Croatian: trgovina; Petar Kriste, Branko Mikša). The Cabinet of Hrvoje Šarinić in turn included the minister of industry, shipbuilding and energy (Croatian: industrija, brodogradnja i energetika; Franjo Kajfež) and the minister of tourism and trade (Croatian: turizam i trgovina; Branko Mikša).
In the Cabinet of Zlatko Mateša, the prime minister also talked of renaming the ministry of economy back into the ministry of industry and energy.[3]
References
- ^ "Odluka o proglašenju državnog proračuna za 2010. godinu" (in Croatian). Narodne novine. 2 December 2009. http://narodne-novine.nn.hr/clanci/sluzbeni/2009_12_151_3690.html. Retrieved 21 February 2010.
- ^ "Ministar Đuro Popijač od danas član vladajućeg HDZ-a" (in Croatian). Slobodna Dalmacija. 2010-08-25. http://www.slobodnadalmacija.hr/Hrvatska/tabid/66/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/113679/Default.aspx. Retrieved 2011-07-26.
- ^ "Žic-Fuchs ministrica znanosti, Đurkić ministar poljoprivrede" (in Croatian). Vjesnik. 23 February 1999. http://www.vjesnik.hr/html/1999/02/23/nunu.htm. Retrieved 17 December 2010. "Također, razmišlja se i o tome da sadašnje Ministarstvo gospodarstva preraste u Ministarstvo industrije, energetike, a možda i turizma."
External links
Government ministries of Croatia Agriculture, Fisheries and Rural Development · Culture · Defence · Economy, Labour and Entrepreneurship · Environmental Protection, Physical Planning and Construction · Family, Veterans' Affairs and Intergenerational Solidarity · Finance · Foreign Affairs and European Integration · Health and Social Welfare · Interior · Justice · Regional Development, Forestry and Water Management · Science, Education and Sports · Sea, Transport and Infrastructure · TourismCategories:- Government ministries of Croatia
- Economy ministries
- Labour ministries
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