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Domna Michailidou
Δόμνα Μιχαηλίδου
Domna Michailidou at a press conference as Deputy Minister for Labour and Social Affairs, November 2019.
Minister for Labour and Social Security
Assumed office
4 January 2024
Prime MinisterKyriakos Mitsotakis
Preceded byAdonis Georgiadis
Deputy Minister for Education, Religious Affairs and Sport
In office
27 June 2023 – 4 January 2024
Prime MinisterKyriakos Mitsotakis
Succeeded byIoanna Lytrivi
Deputy Minister for Labour and Social Affairs
In office
9 July 2019 – 26 May 2023
Prime MinisterKyriakos Mitsotakis
Member of the Hellenic Parliament
Assumed office
21 May 2023
ConstituencyPiraeus A
Personal details
Born (1987-11-13) 13 November 1987 (age 36)
Piraeus, Greece
Political partyNew Democracy
Alma materAthens College
University of York
University of Cambridge

Domna Maria Michailidou (Greek: Δόμνα Μιχαηλίδου; born 13 November 1987) is a Greek economist and politician who currently serves as Minister for Labour and Social Security in the Second Cabinet of Kyriakos Mitsotakis.[1]

Biography[edit]

Michailidou is an academic economist working on economic development, financial crises and public finances.[2] She was previously an adviser to New Democracy leader Kyriakos Mitsotakis on issues related to structural reforms, macroeconomic growth and financial markets.[3]

Since 2014, Michailidou has also been a lecturer in the Centre of Development Studies, University of Cambridge where she teaches topics related to finance and development, private and public debt and government regulation. She has worked for the OECD in Paris and Athens as an economist and a competition expert. Michailidou has also taught at the Judge Business School, University of Cambridge and University College London’s School of Public Policy.[4] She has advised governmental and non-governmental institutions such as the UNDP, the FAO, the British Council, the Ministry of Health in Iran and others.

Her book, The Inexorable Evolution of Financialisation: Financial Crises in Emerging Markets, was published by Palgrave MacMillan in 2016.[4] Her work has also appeared in academic journals, institutional reports and the popular press. She holds an MPhil and a PhD in Financial and Development Economics from the University of Cambridge.[4]

Manuscript[edit]

  • Michailidou D.M. 'Financial Crises in Emerging Markets: The destabilising effects of sudden surges of capital inflows and the inexorable evolution of financialisation', Palgrave Macmillan,[5] published in November 2015. Foreword by G. Harcourt.

Academic journals[edit]

  • Kennedy J. and D.M. Michailidou, 2017, 'Divergent Policy Responses to Increasing Vaccine Skepticism in Southern Europe', The Lancet Infectious Diseases.
  • Kennedy J. and D.M. Michailidou, 2017, 'Civil war, contested sovereignty and the limits of global health partnerships: A case study of the Syrian polio outbreak in 2013', Health Policy and Planning, Oxford University Press.
  • Bowden S., Michailidou D.M. and Pereira A., 2008, 'Chasing Mosquitoes: An exploration of the relationship between economic growth, poverty and the elimination of malaria in Southern Europe in the 20th Century' published in the Journal of International Development (Vol. 20, issue 8).

Popular press[edit]

  • Domna Michailidou and Jonathan Kennedy (2017). "When Populism can Kill," Project Syndicate[6]
  • Jonathan Kennedy and Domna Michailidou (2016). "Rethinking Humanitarian Aid in Civil Wars," Project Syndicate[7]
  • Jonathan Kennedy and Domna Michailidou (2016): "The politics of polio eradication," Project Syndicate[8] [Translated into 7 languages and republished in a variety of newspapers including: El Pais (Spain), L'Orient le Jour (Lebanon), Gulf Times (Qatar), Al Shabiba (Oman), Al Bayan and Khaleej Times (United Arab Emirates), Arab News (Saudi Arabia), Le Quotidien d'Oran (Algeria), The Reporter (Ethiopia), Mareeg (Somalia), Outlook Afghanistan (Afghanistan), Postimees (Estonia), Financial Mirror (Cyprus), Khmer Times (Cambodia), AZERNEWS (Azerbaijan), Expreso (Ecuador)]

References[edit]

Political offices
Preceded by Minister for Labour and Social Security
2024–present
Incumbent