Ahmed Aboutaleb,
Ahmed Aboutaleb,
State Secretary for Social Affairs, Ministry of Social Affairs and Employment, The Netherlands
Ahmed Aboutaleb was born in Beni Sidel (Morocco) on 29 August 1961. From 1991 to 1994 he was a public relations official for the Ministry of Social Welfare, Public Health and Culture and went on to become Head of the Public Relations Department of the Social and Economic Council (SER) until 1997. Until 1998 he was Manager of the Communications and Publications Sector of Statistics Netherlands (CBS). He then became Director of the FORUM Institute for Multicultural Development and in 2002 he was appointed Director of the Social, Economic and Cultural Development Sector of the Amsterdam City Council. In 2004 he was appointed alderman of Amsterdam charged with Work and Income, Education, Youth, Diversity and Urban Policy. Mr Aboutaleb has been a member of many boards including the Supervisory Board of the Mondriaan Onderwijsgroep (regional training centre) in The Hague, the Education Council and the Urban Policy Review Committee. He was co-initiator of the Dutch Coalition for Peace in the Middle East and a member of the board of Babylon, a centre for studies in multilingualism in multicultural societies, affiliated to the Faculty of Arts of the Catholic University of Brabant (Tilburg University). Mr A. Aboutaleb was appointed State Secretary of Social Affairs and Employment in the fourth Balkenende government on 22 February 2007. Responsibilities state secretary Aboutaleb
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OECD Factbook 2008: Economic, Environmental and Social Statistics
With a special focus on productivity Quotes Angel Gurría, Secretary-General of the OECD"Measuring whether life is getting better is one of the most important roles the OECD can take on". Mamphela Ramphele, Co-chair, Global Commission on International Migration (GCIM)"The measurement of anything that is of importance elevates its importance". Kemal Dervis, Administrator of the United Nations Development Programme, UNDP"World GDP growth has been faster than it has been for a very long time. But people are not particularly happy". François Bourguignon, Chief Economist and Senior Vice President of the World Bank"Progress indicators are a way for people to hold their governments accountable". |