The Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) today selected
Kristalina Georgieva to serve as IMF Managing Director and Chair of the
Executive Board for a five-year term starting on October 1, 2019. Ms.
Georgieva, who succeeds Christine Lagarde, is the first person from an
emerging market economy to lead the IMF since its inception in 1944.
The selection of Ms. Georgieva by the 24-member Executive Board
representing the IMF’s 189 member countries brings to a conclusion the
selection process initiated by the Executive Board on July 26, 2019 (see
Press Release No. 19/302). Following interviews with Ms. Georgieva, Executive Directors selected
her for the position, effective October 1.
The Managing Director is the chief of the IMF’s operating staff and Chair
of the Executive Board. The Managing Director is assisted by four Deputy
Managing Directors in the operation of the Fund, which serves its
membership through about 2,700 staff.
Ms. Georgieva, a national of Bulgaria, has been the Chief Executive Officer
of the World Bank since January 2017. From February 1, 2019 to April 8,
2019, she was the Interim President for the World Bank Group. Starting in
2010, she was at the European Commission, serving as Commissioner for
International Cooperation, Humanitarian Aid and Crisis Response, then as
Vice President for Budget and Human Resources. Ms. Georgieva has a Ph.D. in
Economic Science and a M.A. in Political Economy and Sociology from the
University of National and World Economy in Bulgaria, where she also taught
from 1977 to 1991.