Klaus Schwab

Economist

Birthday March 30, 1938

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Ravensburg, Nazi Germany

Age 85 years old

Nationality Germany

#4152 Most Popular

1938

Klaus Martin Schwab (born 30 March 1938) is a German mechanical engineer, economist, and founder of the World Economic Forum (WEF).

Klaus Martin Schwab was born on March 30, 1938, to Eugen Wilhelm Schwab and Erika Epprecht in Ravensburg.

His parents had moved from Switzerland to Germany during the Third Reich in order for his father to assume the role of director at Escher Wyss AG, an industrial company and contractor for the Nazi regime.

Although his father was baptized Lutheran, Schwab was raised Catholic.

Although having three Swiss grandparents and two Swiss brothers, he is a citizen of Germany and has declined multiple offers for naturalization, from both Kurt Furgler and Ueli Maurer.

Schwab attended first and second grades at the primary school in the Wädenswil district of Au, Zürich, in Switzerland.

1957

After World War II, his family moved back to Germany where Schwab attended the Spohn-Gymnasium in Ravensburg until his Abitur in 1957.

1961

In 1961, he graduated as a mechanical engineer from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, with a doctorate in engineering, with a dissertation titled Der längerfristige Exportkredit als betriebswirtschaftliches Problem des Maschinenbaues (Longer-term export credit as a business problem in mechanical engineering).

He also earned a doctorate in economics from the University of Fribourg, and a Master in Public Administration degree from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University.

While attending Harvard, Schwab found a mentor in future National Security Advisor and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger.

1971

He has acted as the WEF's chairman since founding the organisation in 1971.

In 1971, Schwab founded the European Management Forum, which was renamed as the World Economic Forum in 1987.

In 1971, he also published Moderne Unternehmensführung im Maschinenbau.

Schwab married Hilde Schwab, his former assistant, in 1971.

The wedding took place in Sertig Valley at a Reformed church.

1972

Schwab was professor of business policy at the University of Geneva from 1972 to 2003, and since then has been an honorary professor there.

1998

Schwab and his wife Hilde created the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship in 1998.

For example, the WEF awarded a multimillion dollar contract to USWeb in 1998.

Yet shortly after the deal went through, Schwab took a board seat at the same company, reaping valuable stock options.

In June 2021, Schwab sharply criticised the "profiteering", "complacency" and "lack of commitment" of the municipality of Davos in relation to the WEF annual meeting.

He mentioned that the preparation of the COVID-related meeting in Singapore in 2021/2022 had created an alternative to its Swiss host and sees the chance that the annual meeting will stay in Davos at between 40 and 70 per cent.

Among other awards, Schwab has been conferred with the French Legion of Honour (knight distinction), the Grand Cross with Star of the National Order of Germany, and the Japanese Grand Cordon of the Order of the Rising Sun.

He also was awarded the Dan David Prize, and was recognized by Queen Elizabeth as an honorary Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George.

Schwab has also received honorary degrees from various universities, including the National University of Singapore and Kaunas University of Technology in Lithuania.

2003

In 2003 Schwab appointed José María Figueres CEO of the WEF, as his successor.

2004

In October 2004, Figueres resigned over his undeclared receipt of more than US$900,000 in consultancy fees from the French telecommunications firm Alcatel while he was working at the Forum.

2006

In 2006, Transparency International highlighted this incident in their Global Corruption Report.

2011

Schwab founded the Global Shapers Community in 2011 within the WEF to work with young people in "shaping local, regional and global agendas."

2015

In 2015, the WEF was formally recognised by the Swiss Government as an "international body".

Schwab has authored or co-authored several books.

Some consider him to be "an evangelist" for "stakeholder capitalism".

2016

The Fourth Industrial Revolution, the subject of a 2016 book he wrote, is an idea he is credited with popularising.

2017

In January 2017 Steven Poole in The Guardian criticised Schwab's Fourth Industrial Revolution book, pointing out that "the internet of things" would probably be hackable.

He also criticised Schwab for showing that future technologies may be used for good or evil, but not taking a position on the issues, instead offering only vague policy recommendations.

The Financial Times' innovation editor found "the clunking lifelessness of the prose" led him to "suspect this book really was written by humans—ones who inhabit a strange twilight world of stakeholders, externalities, inflection points and 'developtory sandboxes'."

The political scientist Klaus-Gerd Giesen has argued that the dominant ideology of the Fourth Industrial Revolution is transhumanism.

While Schwab declared that excessively high management salaries were "no longer socially acceptable", his own annual salary of about one million Swiss francs (a little more than $1 million USD) has been repeatedly questioned by the media.

The Swiss radio and television corporation SRF mentioned this salary level in the context of ongoing public contributions to the WEF and the fact that the Forum does not pay any federal taxes.

Moreover, the former Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung journalist Jürgen Dunsch made the criticism that the WEF's financial reports were not very transparent since neither income nor expenditures were broken down.

Schwab has also drawn ire for mixing the finances of the not-for-profit WEF and other for-profit business ventures.