Antonio Catricalà

Antonio Catricalà (born 7 February 1952 in Catanzaro, Calabria) is an Italian public manager, politician, professor, lawyer and magistrate.

Antonio Catricalà
Secretary of the Council of Ministers
In office
16 November 2011  28 April 2013
Prime MinisterMario Monti
Preceded byGianni Letta
Succeeded byFilippo Patroni Griffi
Personal details
Born (1952-02-07) 7 February 1952
Catanzaro, Italy
NationalityItalian
Political partyIndependent
Alma materSapienza University of Rome
ProfessionPolitician, lawyer, magistrate, professor, public manager

Biography

Antonio Catricalà graduated with honors in law from the University of Rome "La Sapienza". He later won the competition in ordinary magistracy, and passed the qualifying exam as a lawyer. Subsequently, he became, by competition, councilor and section president of the italian Council of State. He also taught private law in the faculty of law of the University of Rome Tor Vergata.

He was president of the Italian Competition Authority from 9 March 2005 to 16 November 2011.[1] On 18 November 2010 he was appointed chair of the Authority for electricity and gas, but he gave up the charge a few days later to remain President of the Antitrust.

On 16 November 2011 he was appointed Undersecretary of Stateto the Presidency of the Council of Ministers acting as Council Secretary in the Monti Cabinet.[2] On 2 May 2013 he was appointed Deputy Minister to the Ministry of Economic Development in the Letta Cabinet with responsibility for communications.[3]

On 28 October 2014 Catricalà announced that he had resigned as Section President of the Council of State to pursue a career as a lawyer and founded the "Law Academy".[4] Subsequently he became a partner of "Studio Lipani Catricalà & Partners". On 30 June 2015 he was appointed president of the "Body for the management of the lists of financial agents and credit brokers" (Organismo per la gestione degli Elenchi degli Agenti in attività finanziaria e dei Mediatori creditizi). On 20 April 2017 he was appointed chairman of "Aeroporti di Roma SpA".[5]

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References

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