Lagarde, Christine
Lagarde, Christine
(Christine Madeleine Odette Lallouette Lagarde) (krĭstēn` lägärd`), 1956–, French lawyer and government official, the first woman to head the International Monetary FundInternational Monetary Fund(IMF), specialized agency of the United Nations, established in 1945. It was planned at the Bretton Woods Conference (1944), and its headquarters are in Washington, D.C.
..... Click the link for more information. (IMF). She graduated from Univ. of Paris X, Nanterre, with a law degree and from the Political Sciences Institute, Aix-en-Provence, with a masters degree. Lagarde joined a Chicago-based international law firm in 1981, specialized in labor and antitrust matters, and rose to become chair of its global executive committee in 1999. She entered the French government in 2005 as minister of foreign trade, was briefly minister of agriculture (2007), and then served (2007–11) as minister of finance. The first woman to hold the finance post, she moved to reinvigorate France's slumping economy, cut its deficit, and reduce its debt. As chair of the Group of Eight (G-8) in 2011, she launched a program to reform the international monetary system. That same year, after the resignation of Dominique Strauss-KahnStrauss-Kahn, Dominique Gaston André
, 1949–, French economist, lawyer, and politician , b. Neuilly, Ph.D. Univ. of Paris, 1975. A lecturer and economics professor at the Univ.
..... Click the link for more information. , Lagarde was named managing director of the IMF. As IMF head, she has advocated responsible fiscal policies but has been critical of austerity pursued at the expense of economic growth. In 2016 she was found guilty of negligence when she was finance minister (but was not penalized) for not appealing (2008) a multimillion dollar arbitration award against the French government that was later invalidated; prosecutors had more than once called the evidence weak. Lagarde is the author of a number of books on law, trade, and finance.