Ricardo Lagos (born March 2, 1938, Santiago, Chile) is a Chilean economist and politician who served as president of Chile (2000–06).
Lagos earned a law degree from the University of Chile in 1960 and then attended Duke University in Durham, North Carolina, U.S., where he received a Ph.D. in economics in 1966. Lagos returned to Chile and served as director of the University of Chile’s School of Political and Administrative Sciences and was subsequently appointed Chile’s ambassador to the Soviet Union by Salvador Allende, Chile’s first socialist president. In 1973, however, shortly after the appointment, Allende was overthrown in a military coup led by Gen. Augusto Pinochet, and Lagos was never confirmed.
Following the coup, Lagos lived in exile in the United States. In 1978 he accepted a position as an economist with the United Nations, and in the early 1980s he returned to Chile, where he became president of the Democratic Alliance, a coalition of parties opposed to Pinochet. In 1987 Lagos was jailed briefly without charges, and in the same year he founded the Party for Democracy (Partido por la Democracia). In 1988 a plebiscite rejected Pinochet’s continued rule, and two years later Patricio Aylwin Azócar was sworn in as his successor. Lagos was appointed minister of education in Aylwin’s administration and later served as minister of public works in the government of Eduardo Frei Ruiz-Tagle.
In 1999 Lagos, a member of the Socialist Party, secured the presidential nomination of Concertación, a coalition that included the Socialists and the Christian Democrats. Victorious in a runoff election in January 2000, he became the first socialist to hold the presidency since Allende. As president, Lagos vowed not to block attempts to prosecute Pinochet, an action that would create deep divisions within Chilean society. During his term his popularity was bolstered by the country’s impressive economic growth and by the adoption of democratic reforms. Under his leadership Chile also enacted major social reforms, including the legalization of divorce. Lagos left office in 2006 and was succeeded by another Socialist, Michelle Bachelet, the country’s first woman president.
Lagos remained busy, serving as UN special envoy on climate change (2007–10) and as professor-at-large at Brown University (2007–15) in Providence, Rhode Island, U.S. In 2017 he announced that he was running for another term as president of Chile, but he soon withdrew his candidacy.