Arkady Dvorkovich

Arkady Vladimirovich Dvorkovich (Russian Аркадий Владимирович Дворкович; born March 26, 1972 in Moscow ) is a Russian economist and politician. From May 2008 to May 2012 he was one of five personal advisers to the President of the Russian Federation. Since May 2012, he is one of the Deputy Prime Minister in the Government of the Russian Federation. His father Vladimir Yakovlevich Dvorkovich (Russian: Владимир Яковлевич Дворкович ) ( 1937-2005 ) was an internationally known chess referee.

Life

Arkady Dvorkovich visited the Middle School 444 in Moscow. He completed his studies in 1994 from the Moscow State University in Economic Cybernetics and 1996 as one of the graduates of the first class at the Moscow Higher School of Economics New Economic School in Economics. At Duke University in Durham (North Carolina), one of the most prestigious U.S. universities, he concluded in 1997 with a Masters in Economics from.

Dvorkovich is a specialist in the regulation of the economy, financial management and tax planning. The New Yorker magazine BusinessWeek named him in 2003 in the list of the 50 most important leaders in the world. Arkady Dvorkovich is fluent in English and German.

Dvorkovich is married to Sumrud Chandadaschewna Rustamova (Russian Зумруд Хандадашевна Рустамова ), the former Deputy Minister of state property, which is on the board of the Russian mining company Polymetal and the Development Bank of Russia today. The two have a son.

Political career

On 19 May 2008 Dvorkovich was sent by Dmitry Medvedev as chief negotiator of the Russian President to the G -8 Summit in Tōyako. The G8 Summit at Camp David in 2012 Dvorkovich announced that the Russian government would use it against the adoption of the G8 unbalanced explanations for dealing with Iran's nuclear program and the uprising in Syria, which could then play the role of a preliminary decision in the UN Security Council.

Sporty commitment

Since 2006, Dvorkovich is on the board of the Russian Football Union and director of youth development. Since 2007, Dvorkovich was first vice-president, from 2010 to 2014 chairman of the board of the national Russian Chess Federation and as such responsible for the development of chess youth and for the general promotion of chess in Russia.

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