Trevor Manuel

Trevor Manuel
Manuel in 2004
Minister in Finance for the National Planning Commission
In office
11 May 2009 – 24 April 2014
PresidentJacob Zuma
Preceded byMinistry created
Succeeded byMinistry reconfigured
Minister of Finance
In office
4 April 1996 – 10 May 2009
PresidentNelson Mandela
Thabo Mbeki
Kgalema Motlanthe
DeputyGill Marcus
Mandisi Mpahlwa
Jabu Moleketi
Nhlanhla Nene
Preceded byChris Liebenberg
Succeeded byPravin Gordhan
Minister of Trade and Industry
In office
11 May 1994 – 4 April 1996
PresidentNelson Mandela
Preceded byDerek Keys
Succeeded byAlec Erwin
Member of the National Assembly
In office
9 May 1994 – 6 May 2014
Personal details
Born
Trevor Andrew Manuel

(1956-01-31) 31 January 1956 (age 68)
Cape Town, Cape Province
Union of South Africa
Political partyAfrican National Congress
Spouses
Lynne Matthews
(m. 1985; div. 2007)
(m. 2008)
EducationHarold Cressy High School
Alma materPeninsula Technikon

Trevor Andrew Manuel (born 31 January 1956) is a retired South African politician and former anti-apartheid activist who served in the cabinet of South Africa between 1994 and 2014. He was the Minister of Finance from 1996 to 2009 under three successive presidents. He was also the first post-apartheid Minister of Trade and Industry from 1994 to 1996 and later the Minister in the Presidency for the National Planning Commission from 2009 to 2014. He was a member of the National Executive Committee of the African National Congress (ANC) from 1991 to 2012.

Born and raised in Cape Town, Manuel trained as a construction technician but was a full-time political activist from 1981, initially as the general secretary of the Cape Areas Housing Action Committee. Between 1983 and 1990, he was the regional secretary of the United Democratic Front and a member of the front's national executive. During the negotiations to end apartheid, he worked at Shell House as the head of the ANC's internal department of economic planning from 1991 to 1994.

Elected to the National Assembly in the first post-apartheid elections of April 1994, Manuel was also appointed as the Minister of Trade and Industry in Nelson Mandela's Government of National Unity. During his two years in that portfolio, he championed South Africa's post-apartheid economic liberalisation. He became Mandela's Minister of Finance in a cabinet reshuffle in April 1996 and remained in that office for the next 13 years, serving throughout the terms of Presidents Thabo Mbeki and Kgalema Motlanthe. He presided over sustained economic growth in South Africa, which admirers credited partly to the market-friendly Growth, Employment and Redistribution policy of the National Treasury. Though his critics in the Tripartite Alliance derided him as neoliberal, others described him as a pragmatist.

After the April 2009 general election, Manuel was retained in President Jacob Zuma's cabinet as Minister in the Presidency for the National Planning Commission. He oversaw the establishment of the commission, becoming its inaugural chairperson, and presided over the drafting of the National Development Plan 2030, which was adopted in 2012. He announced his retirement from politics ahead of the May 2014 general election. Since 2017, he has been the chairperson of Old Mutual Emerging Markets.


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