Sergio Molina Silva
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Sergio Molina Silva | |
|---|---|
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| Minister of Education | |
| In office 20 September 1994 – 28 September 1996 | |
| President | Eduardo Frei Ruíz-Tagle |
| Preceded by | Ernesto Schifelbein |
| Succeeded by | José Pablo Arellano |
| Minister of Planning | |
| In office 19 July 1990 – 11 March 1994 | |
| President | Patricio Aylwin |
| Preceded by | Creation of the office |
| Succeeded by | Luis Maira |
| Head Minister of the National Planification Office of Chile (ODEPLAN) | |
| In office 11 March 1990 – 19 July 1990 | |
| President | Patricio Aylwin |
| Preceded by | Luis Larraín Arroyo |
| Succeeded by | Office abolished |
| Minister Executive Vicepresident of the Corporación de Fomento de la Producción (CORFO) | |
| In office 1 May 1968 – 3 November 1970 | |
| President | Eduardo Frei Ruíz-Tagle |
| Preceded by | Raúl Sáez |
| Succeeded by | Kurt Dreckmann |
| President of the Central Bank of Chile | |
| In office 3 November 1964 – 1967 | |
| President | Eduardo Frei Montalva |
| Preceded by | Luis Mackenna |
| Succeeded by | Carlos Massad |
| Governor of the Inter-American Development Bank | |
| In office 1964–1967 | |
| Minister of Finance | |
| In office 3 November 1964 – 15 February 1968 | |
| President | Eduardo Frei Montalva |
| Preceded by | Luis Mackenna |
| Succeeded by | Raúl Sáez |
| Head of Budgets of Chile | |
| In office 1960 – 3 November 1994 | |
| President | Jorge Alessandri |
| Preceded by | Creation of the office |
| Succeeded by | Edgardo Boeninger |
| Head of the Budgets Office of Chile | |
| In office 1954–1960 | |
| President |
|
| Preceded by | Heraclio Martínez |
| Succeeded by | Abolition of the office |
| Personal details | |
| Born | 6 December 1928 |
| Party | Christian Democratic Party |
| Spouse | Paulina Barros Holman |
| Children | Three |
| Parent(s) | Violeta Silva Barros Sergio Molina Borgoño |
| Alma mater | |
| Occupation | Scholar |
| Profession | |
Sergio Molina Silva (born 6 September 1928) is a Chilean politician who served as minister.[2]
He is a member of the Chilean Academy of Political, Social, and Moral Sciences.[3]
He was born in Talca on 6 December 1928, the eldest of four siblings of the marriage between Sergio Molina Borgoño and Violeta Silva Barros, daughter of former deputy and minister Matías Silva Sepúlveda and Ana Barros Jarpa (sister of Ernesto Barros Jarpa).[4] He lived in the countryside until the age of twelve.[5]
At the same time, he completed his primary education at the Liceo Blanco Encalada of Talca and later, from his second year of humanities, at the San Ignacio School of Santiago. Among his teachers was the priest Alberto Hurtado, later canonized as a saint.[5][6][7] He married Paulina Barros Holman, with whom he had three daughters.
In 1946, he entered the University of Chile to study at the School of Economic Sciences, graduating in 1950.
