Pedro Pablo Kuczynski (born October 3, 1938, Lima, Peru) is a Peruvian economist and centrist politician who served as president of Peru (2016–18) but was forced to resign because of his alleged involvement in an influence-peddling scandal.
Kuczynski was the son of European immigrants who fled Nazi Germany in the 1930s and settled in Peru. His father, a Jewish physician with family roots in Poland, treated diseases such as leprosy and yellow fever in the Amazonia region, where Kuczynski spent much of his early childhood. He later attended private schools in Lima and in Lancashire, England, before winning a scholarship to attend the University of Oxford, from which he graduated (1960) with degrees in politics and economics. During his first sojourn in the United States, he earned (1961) a master’s degree in public affairs from Princeton University and worked for the World Bank in Washington, D.C. Returning to Peru later in the 1960s, he worked for his country’s Central Reserve Bank and became an economic adviser to Pres. Fernando Belaúnde Terry. After Belaúnde was overthrown by a military coup in 1968, Kuczynski went into exile in the United States, where he again worked for the World Bank, serving for a period as one of its chief economists.
In 1980, after Belaúnde regained the Peruvian presidency with an electoral victory that year, he appointed Kuczynski to serve as the country’s minister of energy and mines, a position that Kuczynski held until 1982, when he left the government to become managing director of a U.S. investment banking firm. Kuczynski was later named to the cabinet of Peruvian Pres. Alejandro Toledo, under whom he served as minister of economy and finance (2001–02 and 2004–05) as well as prime minister (2005–06). In 2007 Kuczynski established the nongovernmental organization Agua Limpia to provide financing for water projects in Peru’s underdeveloped areas.
Kuczynski first ran for president of Peru in 2011 but finished third in the initial round of voting, behind Ollanta Humala (the eventual winner) and conservative congresswoman Keiko Fujimori. In the 2016 presidential election, as in his earlier campaign, Kuczynski advocated free-market policies and touted foreign investment as a key to job growth. He also vowed a tough response to crime and corruption. In the first round of voting in April, Fujimori won but failed to capture a majority of the votes, necessitating a runoff between her and Kuczynski, the second-place finisher. He subsequently made up ground by linking Fujimori to the legacy of her father, former president Alberto Fujimori, who was imprisoned on human rights and corruption charges. Kuczynski also benefited when the leftist politician Verónika Mendoza, the third-place finisher in the first round, transferred her support to him. He narrowly won the June 5 runoff, 50.1–49.9 percent. On July 28 Kuczynski succeeded President Humala, who was constitutionally prohibited from seeking a consecutive term.
Many analysts predicted that Kuczynski’s administration would face steep challenges in governing. Fujimori’s party, Popular Force, dominated the legislative elections, capturing 73 of the 130 seats in the country’s unicameral Congress, while Kuczynski’s party, Peruvians for Change, claimed only 18 seats.
Almost from the outset, Kuczynski’s tenure as president was marred by corruption scandals. In October 2016 he introduced a series of anti-corruption measures after a leaked audiotape appeared to reveal his health policy adviser Carlos Moreno scheming to “mine” the country’s health care system for personal gain. As a result, Kuczynski’s public approval rating fell from 63 percent to 55 percent.
That scandal, however, proved to be but the tip of the iceberg. By 2017 Kuczynski had become embroiled in the massive influence-peddling scandal involving the giant Brazilian construction company Odebrecht, which was found to have paid bribes to officials in a number of countries—most notably in South America—in exchange for contracts and for turning a blind eye to deliberate cost overruns (see Petrobras scandal). Kuczynski initially denied having had any involvement with Odebrecht, but it was alleged that while he was serving in the Toledo government, Kuczynski received some $782,000 from Odebrecht through the investment company that he owned. Kuczynski later claimed that his company was being managed for him at the time and that he had been unaware of its association with Odebrecht.
Nevertheless, in December 2017 the president faced an impeachment vote in Congress. For Kuczynski to be impeached, at least 87 representatives would have had to vote in favour of the motion to impeach. In the event, there were only 78 votes for impeachment, 19 against, and 21 abstentions. In surviving the vote, Kuczynski received the unlikely support of Keiko Fujimori. Only days later Kuczynski granted a medical pardon to Alberto Fujimori, who was released from prison to hospital care, prompting accusations that the action was a quid pro quo for Keiko Fujimori’s support. Kuczynski’s declining approval rating fell further after the pardon, dropping from 26 percent in November 2017 to 19 percent in January 2018.
The Odebrecht scandal followed Kuczynski into the new year. In March 2018 Congress once again prepared to vote on impeachment. On the cusp of the vote, a leaked videotape was released that showed supporters of Kuczynski apparently attempting to bribe members of Congress to cast their votes in Kuczynski’s favour. In the wake of the video’s release, Kuczynski tendered his resignation on March 21, though he disavowed any personal involvement in wrongdoing. Congress accepted Kuczynski’s resignation on March 23. He was promptly replaced as president by Martín Vizcarra, the former governor of Moquegua, who had been serving as Peru’s ambassador to Canada.
In April 2019 Kuczynski was imprisoned as prosecutors investigated the allegations against him. Later that month, however, he underwent heart surgery, and his sentence was changed to house arrest.