Since joining the EBRD in 2006, Berglöf has been credited with creating the "Vienna Initiative", a crisis coordination response involving private banks, the IMF, the World Bank, the European Investment Bank and the European Commission, shown to have mitigated the impact of the global financial crisis in Europe. Its sequel Vienna Initiative 2.0 focuses on managing the impact of the adjustment of the European banking system in the wake of the crisis. As part of the Vienna Initiative 2.0, Berglöf chaired a working group on the banking union with representatives from the international financial institutions, the European Commission, ECB, national regulators and supervisors, and a number of private banks. Berglöf launched "Transition to Transition", designed to promote peer-to-peer exchange of transition and reform experience between senior policymakers and sector experts in EBRD's current countries of operations and countries of the southern and eastern Mediterranean region. Together with Forward Thinking, a think tank promoting understanding between wider Muslim grassroots communities and European policymakers, he also initiated a series of multi-party meetings on private sector development with political leaders from Egypt, Libya and Tunisia.
European Union reform
Berglöf has also been involved in policymaking and broader reform efforts around the Euro-crisis as a member of the INET Council on the Eurozone Crisis. In addition, he is involved in global financial reform efforts as a member of the Global Agenda Council on Systemic Financial Risk and the steering group of The Role of Financial Services in Society, both under the World Economic Forum. He has contributed a number of publications on European Reform, including "BUILT TO LAST: A Political Architecture for Europe". In Sweden he has also served on a number of government commissions devoted to regulation and supervision of the financial sector, including the commission investigating the Swedish Financial Crisis and the Financial Markets Commission.
Corporate governance
has been a particular interest of Berglöf's. He has contributed to academic literature in the comparative study of corporate governance, as well as participated in various policy initiatives, including as a former co-director of the Global Corporate Governance Forum and current board member and research fellow of the European Corporate Governance Institute. In Sweden he was an expert on the government Commission of Ownership and Control and was invited to participate in the council created to assess the implementation of the Swedish corporate governance code.
Development and emerging markets
Berglöf is involved in broader development issues with a particular emphasis on emerging markets. He is a member of the Council of Chief Economists of the international financial institutions and has initiated collaboration with, among others, the MIT Poverty Lab and the Institute of Fiscal Studies on randomized field experiments and micro surveys, including initiating the Life in Transition Survey, a combined household and attitudinal survey implemented in 45 countries. He is a member of the governing board of the Institute for New Economic Thinking and has been a member of the Swedish Development Minister's Expert Group on Development Issues and the Swedish Foreign Minister's Strategic Advisory Board and EU Policy Advisory Board.
Berglöf was a professor at the Stockholm School of Economics from 1996 to 2006. During his time at the Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics he built it into a leading international research institution and helped establish several other think tanks in the emerging world: Baltic International Centre for Economic Policy Studies, Kiev Economics Institute, WISER, and Center for China in the World Economy, research-based think tanks in Riga, Kiev, Warsaw, and Beijing, respectively. In 2005, Berglöf co-founded with the Brookings Institution, The Global Institute, an alliance of research-based think tanks in emerging markets with the aim of strengthening evidence-based policymaking in emerging markets.
Russia
In 2000, Berglöf founded the Centre for Economic and Financial Research in Moscow, recruiting the first PhDs in economics back to Russia to involve them in the policy process. Recently ranked as the best economics think tank in Russia and 25th in the world, it was part of the New Economic School, the leading graduate program in economics in Russia and the top economics department in the post-Communist world. Currently, Berglöf continue to be in the NES International Advisory Board and serves on NES board of directors. In 2013, Berglöf was awarded the Leontief Medal for his contributions to economic reform in Russia.
Erik Berglöf was born in Stockholm as the eldest of six children and grew up in Lund, Malmö and Östersund, Sweden. Early in his career, Berglöf held local political office: at 18 he was the youngest member elected to the city council of the Östersund Municipality and the County Council of Jämtland county. He did his military service at the :sv:Tolkskolan|Army Interpretation School where he studied Russian and East Bloc studies at Uppsala University and later was a special adviser on economic policy and physical planning in the Prime Minister's Office of Sweden. He has an MA and a PhD from the Stockholm School of Economics.
Personal
Since 1989 Erik Berglöf has been married to Annie Maccoby Berglöf. Together they have two daughters, Alexandra and Katarina.