Cecil de Strycker

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Person.png Cecil de Strycker  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(central banker, economist, deep state operative?)
De Strycker.jpg
Born1915
Died2004 (Age 88)
NationalityBelgian
Alma materSint-Ignatius Handelshogeschool, Catholic University Leuven

Baron Cecil de Strycker was a Belgian economist, civil servant, and former governor of the National Bank of Belgium (NBB) from 1975 until 1982. He was also President of the Egmont Institute 1983-1987.

Career

He obtained a PhD in commercial sciences with a thesis on the National Bank. At the beginning of the Second World War, he was taken prisoner for several weeks. Then until 1945, he worked for the professional association of the chemical industry.[1]

He joined the NBB in 1945 as an executive in the Foreign Affairs department, and in 1958 he was appointed as a director at the bank. In 1968 he became a member of the European Economic Community's Monetary Committee. In 1971 he succeeded Franz de Voghel as vice-governor of the Bank, and he was appointed governor in 1975. During his tenure as governor of the NBB, the management of the Bank remained resolute in the face of ever-increasing calls for a devaluation of the belgian franc to resolve the crisis which hit Belgium in the 1970s. As an alternative, Cecil de Strycker emphasised the need for an effective recovery policy and wage moderation.[2]

He played an important role on the Committee of Governors of the Central Banks of the Member States of the European Economic Community and in the European Monetary Cooperation Fund, and in 1978 he became the president of both these institutions. In 1979, the European Monetary System was launched, which based on the ECU.

On 19 February 1982 the Belgian government of Martens V, informed him that a devaluation of the Belgian franc was imminent. The National Bank had not been directly involved in the preparations for the devaluation, which had been prepared by Alfons Verplaetse and Jacques van Ypersele de Strihou. Cecil de Strycker retired in March 1982

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