Reinhold Stephanes (born August 13, 1939, Porto União) is a Brazilian economist and politician affiliated with the Social Democratic Party, who is currently serving as the Secretary of Public Management of Paraná.[1][2][3] He was Minister of Agriculture, Labor and Social Security during the Collor, Fernando Henrique Cardoso and Lula administrations.
Personal life
A descendant of Germans,[4][5][6][7] Reinhold Stephanes is the son of Oswald Stephanes and Lili Schumann Poll Stephanes, farmers from Paraná.[1][6] His parents migrated from Rio Negro to Santa Catarina, and Reinhold was born in the Porto União region. He speaks Portuguese and German.[6] He was raised in União da Vitória, and at the age of ten he moved to Rio Negro. At the age of twelve, he settled in Curitiba, going to live at the boarding school of the Curitiba Technical School.[6]
At eighteen, he joined the army, staying there for five years, first as a soldier, then as a corporal.[6] In 1963 he graduated in economics from the Federal University of Paraná[2] and specialized in economic development from ECLAC/UN in the same year. In 1966 he finished a specialization in public administration in Germany.[6]
He is the father of Reinhold Stephanes Junior, an economist,[6] former state deputy, and currently a substitute federal deputy for the Social Democratic Party.[8]
Public life
In 1963 he was technical assistant in administration to the Central Budget Directory of the Paraná state government.[1] He was economic advisor to the Curitiba City Hall's Treasury Department in 1964.[1] In 1965 he was supervisor of Economic and Social Planning at the Curitiba mayor's office.[1]
In 1966 he was appointed Curitiba's Municipal Secretary of Finance, a position he held until 1967 under Mayor Ivo Arzua Pereira.[2] Still in Curitiba's City Hall, he was General Inspector of Finances from 1967 to 1970.[1][2]
In 2016, he was denounced for his participation in the airline ticket scandal, which occurred when he was a federal deputy in 2009.[9] He allegedly continued to use the airfare quota to which he was entitled as a deputy, after being appointed minister, despite Act 42 of the Bureau of the House of Representatives, from 2000, stating that deputies cannot use the quota while their alternates are in office.[10]