Min Zhu assumed the position of Deputy Managing Director on July 26, 2011. Previously he served as Special Advisor to the Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund from May 3, 2010 to July 25, 2011.
Mr. Zhu, a native of China, was a Deputy Governor of the People’s Bank of China. He was responsible for international affairs, policy research, and credit information. Prior to his service at China’s central bank, he held various positions at the Bank of China where he served as Group Executive Vice president, responsible for finance and treasury, risk management, internal control, legal and compliance, and strategy and research. Mr. Zhu also worked at the World Bank and taught economics at both Johns Hopkins University and Fudan University.
Mr. Zhu received a Ph.D and an M.A. in economics from Johns Hopkins University, an M.P.A. from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University, and a B.A. in economics from Fudan University.
Latest posts:
- The Change in Demand for Debt: The New Landscape in Low-income Countries
- Financing for Sustainable Development: Money and the Right Policies
- Moving On Up: The Growth Story of Frontier Economies
- Managing House Price Booms in Emerging Markets
- Building a Camaraderie of Central Bankers: How Monetary Policymakers in the Caucasus and Central Asia Can Learn From Each Other
- Asia’s Seismic Shift: How Can the Financial Sector Serve Better?
- Era of Benign Neglect of House Price Booms is Over
- The New Frontier: Economies on the Rise
- Emerging Markets Need To Do More To Remain Engines of Global Growth
- Less Red Tape, More Credit: How the Private Sector Can Flourish in the Middle East
- Strengthening the Foundations for Fiscal Policymaking: A New Fiscal Transparency Code
- Make the Most of What You’ve Got: Small States in the Spotlight
- Restoring Jobs by Restoring Growth
- Paying the Price for the Future We Want
- Jobs and Growth: Can’t Have One Without the Other?