Imrich Karvaš

Imrich Karvaš
Born (1903-02-25)25 February 1903
Kalinčiakovo, Austria-Hungary
Died 22 February 1981(1981-02-22) (aged 77)
Bratislava, Czechoslovakia
Institution Governor of the Slovak National Bank
Alma mater Comenius University in Bratislava
Contributions Financed the Slovak National Uprising

Imrich Karvaš (25 February 1903 – 22 February 1981) was a Slovak economist.

Life

Imrich Karvaš was born in Varšany, now Kalinčiakovo, on 25 February 1903. He entered the Law Faculty of Comenius University in Bratislava in 1921, graduating in 1925. After graduation he pursued further studies in Paris and Strasbourg before returning to Slovakia to combine the role of academic economist with working for major financial institutions. In 1938 he entered Jan Syrový's government as Minister without portfolio. With the establishment of the First Slovak Republic in 1939, he was appointed Governor of the Slovak National Bank, a position he combined with that of full professor of national economics at the University of Bratislava.

Head office of the Slovak National Bank in Bratislava (presently General Prosecutors Office), designed by architect Emil Belluš

As the Governor of the Slovak National Bank he helped organize the Slovak National Uprising. To help finance the uprising he redistributed the financial and commodity reserves of the state to the center of the uprising in the city of Banská Bystrica.

In September 1944, during the aftermath of the Slovak National Uprising, Karvaš was arrested by the Gestapo and sent to Dachau Concentration Camp. He was condemned to death in February 1945, but the sentence was never carried out. Karvaš was among the prisoners transferred to Tyrol in April 1945 and released there.

In 1947 Karvaš published his major work, Základy hospodárskej vedy (The Basics of the Economic Science), and went on to serve as dean and pro-dean of the Faculty of Law. In May 1949 the new Communist authorities sentenced him to two years in prison. In 1958 he was sentenced to a further 17 years, on charges of espionage and treason, but after 1960 he was rehabilitated, living the rest of his life in relative obscurity. He died in Bratislava on 22 February 1981.

Works

Sources

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