OECD

intergovernmental economic organization

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is an international organisation of countries. Member countries of OECD all have a democratic system of government. They also accept the principle of a free economy. A country has a free economy when its government does not control the economic activities of its citizens and companies.

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Logo of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
Logo
  Founder States (1961)
  Other Member States
SecretariatFrance Paris, France
Official languagesEnglish
French
Membership
Leaders
• Secretary-General
Mathias Cormann
Establishment
• as the OEECa
16 April 1948
• reformed as the OECD
30 September 1961
  1. Organisation for European Economic Co-operation.

The OECD started 1948 as the Organisation for European Economic Co-operation (OEEC). The Second World War had just ended three years before in 1945. Some countries of Europe came together to form OEEC to help each other re-build their industry and other things destroyed in the Second World War. Later on, some non-European countries also joined this organisation. In 1960, OEEC changed its name, and it became OECD: the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.

The OECD's headquarters are at the Château de la Muette in Paris.

Secretaries General

Secretary-General of the OECD[1]
No.Secretary-GeneralTime servedCountry of originNotes
1Thorkil Kristensen30 September 1961 – 30 September 1969 Denmark
2Emiel van Lennep1 October 1969 – 30 September 1984 Netherlands
3Jean-Claude Paye1 October 1984 – 30 September 1994 France
Staffan Sohlman (interim)1 October 1994 – November 1994 Sweden[2][3]
3Jean-Claude PayeNovember 1994 – 31 May 1996 France[4]
4Donald Johnston1 June 1996 – 31 May 2006 Canada
5José Ángel Gurría1 June 2006 – 31 May 2021 Mexico[5]
6Mathias Cormann1 June 2021 – present Australia[6]

Members

OECD has thirty-eight member countries,[7] of which 19 became members in 1961. These countries are:

  1. Austria
  2. Belgium
  3. Canada
  4. Denmark
  5. France
  6. Germany
  7. Greece
  8. Iceland
  9. Ireland
  10. Luxembourg
  11. Netherlands
  12. Norway
  13. Portugal
  14. Spain
  15. Sweden
  16. Switzerland
  17. Turkey
  18. United Kingdom
  19. United States

19 countries joined OECD after 1961. The names of these countries (with the year they joined in brackets), are:

  1. Italy (1962)
  2. Japan (1964)
  3. Finland (1969)
  4. Australia (1971)
  5. New Zealand (1973)
  6. Mexico (1994)
  7. Czechia (1995)
  8. Hungary (1996)
  9. South Korea (1996)
  10. Poland(1996)
  11. Slovakia (2000)
  12. Chile (2010)
  13. Estonia (2010)
  14. Israel (2010)
  15. Slovenia (2010)
  16. Latvia (2016)
  17. Lithuania (2018)
  18. Colombia (2020)
  19. Costa Rica (2021)

References

Other websites

Video clips