When Elvira Nabiullina was nominated to be the governor of the Central Bank of Russia, one reaction from the country’s parliament stood out in the headlines.
Vladimir Zhirinovsky, the controversial and outspoken head of the Liberal Democrats said the job required “brains only a man could have”.
More than ten years later, she is still in position. Zhirinovsky died in 2022. She has made the job her own and is now a longstanding member of Putin’s inner circle.
In her first big interview after she was appointed, she said the bank “must be more open when it comes to its policies... although central banks are usually quite closed structures in many countries, I see the importance of explaining what we do to our citizens”.
A Nabiullina smile is a very rare thing, at least in public. She appears sharply focused on the topic, and always acts in a thinking, professional manner.
Having kept the Russian president’s confidence for more than two decades, she is now known as “Putin’s banker” and key to running the country’s finances, including for the war in Ukraine. What do we know about this enigmatic and influential figure?
A student stands out
A woman from a working-class family, she hails from what is now the Republic of Bashkortostan in the Russian Federation, between the Volga and the Urals, and stands out among Putin’s allies.
Graduating just before the Soviet Union collapsed, she studied at the Moscow State University’s Faculty of Economics, in part because the subject was completely new to her. “I can’t say that it was economics that attracted me,” she recalled in 2014 to renowned Russian journalist Vladimir Pozner.
“I really didn’t know what that was. I was attracted by the unknown. When I first came to Moscow and I read the list of faculties where I could gain admission, everything sounded familiar to me except economics. We hadn’t studied it at school.”
Nabiullina held various positions in the 1990s, including a brief stint in government, but it was when she joined a committee preparing for Moscow’s 2006 presidency of the G8 club of major nations that she was drawn into Putin’s orbit.
Accelerated seniority
A year later, in September 2007, she was appointed minister of economic development and trade, having earlier been selected for the prestigious Yale World Fellows programme that she did not complete due to her government appointment.
A ministry colleague described her as “intelligent, hardworking, resilient, a liberal market economist, working as minister in a market economy that is nowhere near ideal”. Why? “The only person who can answer that is Elvira Nabiullina herself.”