Delia Velculescu
Delia Velculescu (born in 1975) is a Romanian-American economist and the current IMF mission chief in Greece.[1]
She was born Delia Moraru in the city of Sibiu, in Transylvania, Romania.[1][2] As a young student, she was taught in physics by future Romanian President Klaus Iohannis at Gheorghe Lazăr National College in Sibiu.[1] In 1992, she earned a scholarship to study economics at Wilson College, Pennsylvania, in the United States.[3] She later earned an MSc and a PhD from Johns Hopkins University.[1] While at Johns Hopkins, she met her husband, Victor Velculescu, professor of oncology.[2]
She has been working for the IMF since 2002, and has supervised programs in Slovenia and Cyprus,[4] prior to becoming IMF mission chief in Greece.
Velculescu has studied the economic prospects of Greece for many years, and back in July 2009 she published a study on the Greek economy , co-written with two of her colleagues at the IMF's European Department, Spanish economist Marialuz Moreno-Badia, and Dutch economist Bob Traa.
References
- Gillet, Kit (29 July 2015). "'Iron lady' set to play central role in next act of Greek bailout drama". The Guardian. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
- Delia Velculescu, negociatoarea FMI care va încerca să salveze Grecia de la dezastru, 29 iulie 2015, Digi24.ro, accesat la 22 februarie 2017
- "Doamna Draculescu" tine in mana destinele Greciei! Vezi cum a ajuns o romanca de succes sefa misiunii FMI !, 22 iulie 2015, CanCan, accesat la 22 februarie 2017
- "IMF Upgrades Slovenia Growth Forecast to 1.4%".