Hans Wijers

Hans Wijers
Wijers in 2010
Minister of Finance
In office
4 June 1996 – 26 June 1996
Ad interim
Prime MinisterWim Kok
Preceded byGerrit Zalm
Succeeded byGerrit Zalm
Minister of Economic Affairs
In office
22 August 1994 – 3 August 1998
Prime MinisterWim Kok
Preceded byKoos Andriessen
Succeeded byAnnemarie Jorritsma
Personal details
BornGerardus Johannes Wijers
(1951-01-11) 11 January 1951
Oostburg, Netherlands
PartyDemocrats 66 (since 1976)
Domestic partnerEdith Sijmons (since 1988)
Children2
Alma materUniversity of Groningen
Erasmus University Rotterdam (PhD)
OccupationPolitician · Civil servant · Economist · Businessman · Professor

Gerardus Johannes "Hans" Wijers (born 11 January 1951) is a Dutch retired politician and businessman who served as Minister of Economic Affairs from 1994 to 1998 under Prime Minister Wim Kok. A member of the Democrats 66 (D66) party, he has been the chairman of the supervisory board of ING Group since 2018.

Early life

After secondary school at Hogere Burgerschool (HBS-B) level, Wijers studied economics at the University of Groningen, where he graduated cum laude in 1976. As assistant professor, he taught economics at the Erasmus University, and in 1982 received a doctorate for his research in "Industrial politics: the design of governmental policy for industrial sectors".[1][2]

Civil service

From 1982 till 1984, Wijers worked as a civil servant at the ministry of Social Affairs and Labour and later at the ministry of Economic Affairs. Subsequently, he became a management consultant at, amongst others, Horringa & De Koning, which later became part of Boston Consulting Group.

Politics

Wijers, a member of D66 since 1976, was asked in 1994 by his party colleague Hans van Mierlo to take up a ministerial post in the First Kok cabinet. As Minister of Economic Affairs he was responsible for the law change regarding the extending of shop opening hours, and he formulated the Competition Regulation law which triggered the foundation of the Dutch Competition Authority. An important event in his ministry was the bankruptcy of the Fokker aircraft factory in March 1996. When Wijers refused further state aid due to a lack of a clear future perspective, German company DASA withdrew as parent company.

By the end of the cabinet period, Hans van Mierlo had decided not to stand for re-election. The party leaders exercised strong pressure on the popular Wijers to take on the party leadership. When the second purple cabinet was formed after the election in 1998, Wijers expressed that he had no interest in a second term as minister.

Life after politics

In 1999 Wijers picked up his old career as a consultant: he became senior partner and chairman of the Dutch branch of the consulting firm The Boston Consulting Group. In July 2002 he became a member of the Board of Directors of Akzo Nobel NV and on 1 May 2003 he became chairman of the board of directors. He succeeded Kees van Lede. Under his leadership the pharmacy branch of Organon, (Organon BioSciences), was sold in 2007 and the British ICI was acquired. AkzoNobel focused more to paint and chemistry. At the end of April 2012 he decided to resign as chairman of the board. He was succeeded by Ton Büchner.[3]

Wijers has been non-executive director at Royal Dutch Shell since January 2009; he later became vice-chairman. He is President of Heineken and supervisory director at HAL Holding NV. He is also chairman of the Vereniging Natuurmonumenten and chairman of the supervisory board of the Royal Concertgebouw NV. In 2010 he was chairman of the jury of the Libris Literature Prize. In 2013 he was chairman of the National Committee inauguration for King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands.

From 2021 to 2022, Wijers was a member of the Trilateral Commission’s Task Force on Global Capitalism in Transition, chaired by Carl Bildt, Kelly Grier and Takeshi Niinami.[4]

In November 2025, Wijers was asked to become one of the two informateurs in the process of forming a new coalition after the October parliamentary elections.[5] Within 20 hours after accepting this role, he already resigned from it because of a publication by newspaper NRC that he had expressed himself in a very negative manner about VVD party leader Yeşilgöz. The commotion around this forced him to step down immediately in order not to damage the formation process.[6]

Personal

Wijers lives with his partner, and has two children.

Decorations

Honours
Ribbon bar Honour Country Date Comment
Officer of the Order of Orange-Nassau Netherlands 30 October 1998

References

  1. ^ "Hans Wijers, Chief Executive Officer". AkzoNobel. 2009. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008. Retrieved 12 March 2009.
  2. ^ "Dr. G.J. Wijers". Parlementair Documentatie Centrum (PDC UL) of Leiden University. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  3. ^ "AkzoNobel CEO Hans Wijers to leave 2012 – Ton Büchner to succeed" (Press release). Akzo Nobel NV. 10 June 2011. Archived from the original on 4 August 2020. Retrieved 19 April 2019.
  4. ^ Task Force on Global Capitalism in Transition Trilateral Commission.
  5. ^ "Doel volgende formatiefase: D66 en CDA moeten doorbraak vinden op stikstof en energie" [Objective of the next formation phase: D66 and CDA must achieve a breakthrough on nitrogen and energy]. NOS (in Dutch). 13 November 2025. Retrieved 15 November 2025.
  6. ^ Logtenberg, Hugo (14 November 2025). "Wijers uitte in appbericht nog meer kritiek op 'feeks' Yesilgöz, treedt terug na vragen van NRC" [Wijers voiced further criticism of 'shrew' Yesilgöz in a text message, resigns after questions from NRC]. NRC (in Dutch). Retrieved 15 November 2025.