Leonid Hakobyan (in Armenian: Լեոնիդ Հակոբյան; June 5, 1936, Leninakan, Soviet Union – February 6, 2002, Yerevan, Armenia) was a Soviet and Armenian economist and politician. PhD in Economics (1984), professor (1990), Corresponding Member of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences (2000).[1]
Leonid Hakobyan | |
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Born | Leninakan, Armenian SSR, Soviet Union | June 5, 1936
Died | February 6, 2002 Yerevan, Armenia | (aged 65)
Occupation | Economist |
Known for | Armenian academician and politician |
Position held | Special Guest of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (2000–2000) |
Biography
editIn 1957, he graduated from the Moscow Institute of Finance; later on, he completed courses in Moscow Correspondence Institute of Law (1958) and Mechanical Engineering Institute (1964). In 1958, he became a CPSU member. From 1976 to 1979 - Deputy and First Deputy Minister of Trade of Armenian SSR. In 1981, he graduated from the Academy of Economics under the USSR Council of Ministers. From 1981 to 1990 he served as a deputy of the Supreme Council of the Armenian SSR, being a Deputy Chairman of the Committee on Finance, Budget, Loans and Economics; later on - a deputy of the Supreme Council of independent Armenia, a member of the Standing Committee on Financial-Credit, Budgetary and Economic Affairs.[2] Through 1992-1996 he had been Chairman of the Committee on Economy and Finance of the Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of the CIS states. In 1999, he became Second Secretary of the Armenian Communist Party. He dealt with the issues of the mechanization of labor and the functional structure of the workforce in industry and its improvement, and the implementation of high technologies.
In 2000, he served as Minister of territorial administration and infrastructure օf Armenia.[3]
In 2000, he became Corresponding Member of the Armenian National Academy of Sciences.
Also in 2000, he became Member of Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Leonid S. Hakobyan". Armenian National Academy of Sciences.
- ^ "MEMBERS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY OF ARMENIA, SECOND CONVOCATION. Leonid Hakobyan". National Assembly of Armenia.
- ^ "Leonid HAKOBYAN, Assembly Member". Ministry of territorial administration and infrastructure օf Armenia.
- ^ "Ministers of the Territorial Administration. History". Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.