Delia Velculescu (born in 1975) is a Romanian-American economist and the IMF mission chief in Greece during the Greek government debt crisis,[1] before her replacement by Peter Dolman in 2018.[2]

She was born Delia Moraru in the city of Sibiu, in Transylvania, Romania.[1][3] 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.[4] 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.[3]

She has been working for the IMF since 2002, and has supervised programs in Slovenia and Cyprus,[5] 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

  1. 1 2 3 4 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.
  2. "Velculescu leaves the quartet -Peter Dolman new chief of the IMF mission to Greece (original: Τέλος η Βελκουλέσκου από το κουαρτέτο -Ο Πίτερ Ντόλμαν επικεφαλής του ΔΝΤ για την Ελλάδα)". iefimerida. 26 January 2018. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  3. 1 2 Delia Velculescu, negociatoarea FMI care va încerca să salveze Grecia de la dezastru, 29 iulie 2015, Digi24.ro, accesat la 22 februarie 2017
  4. "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
  5. "IMF Upgrades Slovenia Growth Forecast to 1.4%".



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