Giuseppe Medici (24 October 1907 – 21 August 2000) was an Italian politician and economist.[1]

Giuseppe Medici
Minister of Foreign Affairs
In office
26 July 1972 – 7 July 1973
Prime MinisterGiulio Andreotti
Preceded byAldo Moro
Succeeded byAldo Moro
In office
24 June 1968 – 12 December 1968
Prime MinisterAldo Moro
Preceded byAmintore Fanfani
Succeeded byPietro Nenni
Minister for Public Administration Reform
In office
21 February 1962 – 16 May 1963
Prime MinisterAmintore Fanfani
Preceded byTiziano Tessitori
Succeeded byRoberto Lucifredi
Minister of Industry and Commerce
In office
5 December 1963 – 5 March 1965
Prime MinisterAldo Moro
Preceded byGiuseppe Togni
Succeeded byEdgardo Lami Starnuti
Minister of Public Education
In office
15 February 1959 – 26 July 1960
Prime MinisterAntonio Segni
Fernando Tambroni
Preceded byAldo Moro
Succeeded byGiacinto Bosco
Minister of Budget
In office
1 July 1958 – 15 February 1959
Prime MinisterFernando Tambroni
Preceded byAmintore Fanfani
Succeeded byAdone Zoli
In office
21 June 1963 – 4 December 1963
Prime MinisterAntonio Giolitti
Preceded byGiovanni Leone
Succeeded byUgo La Malfa
Minister of Treasury
In office
16 February 1956 – 1 July 1958
Prime MinisterGiulio Andreotti
Preceded byAntonio Segni
Adone Zoli
Succeeded byEzio Vanoni
Minister of Agriculture
In office
18 January 1954 – 2 July 1955
Prime MinisterEmilio Colombo
Preceded byAmintore Fanfani
Mario Scelba
Succeeded byRocco Salomone
Member of the Senate
In office
8 May 1948 – 4 July 1976
Personal details
Born24 October 1907
Sassuolo, Italy
Died21 August 2000 (2000-08-22) (aged 92)
Modena, Italy
NationalityItaly Italian
Political partyChristian Democracy
ProfessionPolitician

Biography edit

He was born in Sassuolo, in the province of Modena, to Agostino Medici and Ersilia Messori, the second of four children. In 1926, after graduating as a surveyor at the Guarini Institute in Modena, he enrolled at the "Istituto Superiore Agrario di Milano" where he graduated in Agricultural Sciences in 1929, with a thesis on the economy of irrigation in the Lombard plain. Once military obligations were fulfilled, he briefly taught at the Technical Institute for Surveyors of Piacenza. In 1930 he published numerous publications and in 1931 he became the assistant of Giuseppe Tassinari; the following year he was a lecturer in agricultural economics and politics at the University of Bologna. In 1933 he won the competition for the chair at the University of Perugia and was then called to teach at the University of Turin.

In 1934 he published the Introduction to Agrarian Estimation which was a prelude to the Principles of Estimation of 1948, a text that will know many editions and will be adopted in numerous schools. In that same year he married Grazia Fiandri, with whom he had three children. In 1940 he wrote numerous agricultural voices in the Dictionary of Politics of the National Fascist Party. He was head of the Research Office of the Ministry of Agriculture, actively participated in the drafting of the civil code of 1942. The provisions of Book V in matters of agricultural law were set up by a subcommittee in which Medici had a prominent role, and great part of those rules were drafted by him in person.

Doctors also carried out a scientific activity focused on the themes of agriculture, agrarian reform and land reclamation. In July 1943 he took part in the work that led to the drafting of the Code of Camaldoli.[2]

In 1960 he was called to hold the chair of Economic and Financial Policy of the Faculty of Political Science at the Sapienza University of Rome and became president of the National Academy of Agriculture.[3]

From 1945 onwards he had more and more frequent relations with political circles thanks above all to agricultural skills: he was called by Manlio Rossi Doria to give his contribution to the solution of the problems of the agricultural economy in Italy and was included in the Italian delegation which in 1947 he went to the United States to discuss the Marshall Plan.

Initially close to the Italian Liberal Party, Medici then decided to join the Christian Democracy.

In 1948 he was elected Senator and held office until 1976. Medici served numerous times as Minister: he was Minister of Agriculture (Fanfani I Cabinet and Scelba Cabinet), Minister of Treasury (Leone II Cabinet and Andreotti II Cabinet), Minister of Budget (Fanfani II Cabinet), Minister of Public Education (Segni II Cabinet), Minister of Public Administration (Fanfani IV Cabinet), Minister of Industry (Moro I Cabinet and Moro II Cabinet) and Minister of Foreign Affairs (Andreotti II Cabinet).

He declined to run for re-election in 1976. Following his retirement from politics, he returned to academia and served as a professor emeritus at Sapienza University of Rome. He was also President of Montedison from 1977 to 1980.

He was also president of the Bolognese economic studies firm "Nomisma" from 1984 to 1995 and honorary president from 1995 until his death.

He died on 21 August 2000 at the age of 92.[4]

References edit