Manea MÃÂnescu (; 9 August 1916 â February 2009) was a Romanian economist and politician who served as Prime Minister of Romania from 1974 to 1979 during the CeauÃÂescu regime.
Manea MÃÂnescu was born on 9 August 1916. His father was a veteran communist activist from PloieÃÂti who, in the early 1920s, supported the transformation of the Socialist Party into the Romanian Communist Party (PCR). MÃÂnescu studied economics at the Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest and joined the Romanian Communist Party in 1938 while still a student.
Following the 23 August 1944 coup d'état, MÃÂnescu worked within the Union of Communist Youth, where he collaborated closely with Nicolae CeauÃÂescu, who later became his brother-in-law.
In 1951, MÃÂnescu was appointed head of the Department of Economics at the University of Bucharest and Director General of the Central Directorate of Statistics. He served as Minister of Finance from 1955 to 1957.
In December 1967, MÃÂnescu was appointed Chairman of the Economic Council. He became a full member of the Executive Committee of the PCR in December 1968, consolidating his position within the partyâÂÂs technocratic elite.
In 1974, he was elected a titular member of the Romanian Academy.
MÃÂnescu was appointed Prime Minister in March 1974, serving until 1979. His tenure coincided with RomaniaâÂÂs growing foreign debt and the introduction of strict economic austerity measures. He was widely regarded as a loyal supporter of CeauÃÂescu and functioned primarily as an administrator rather than a policy initiator.
He retired from office in 1979, reportedly due to ill health.
MÃÂnescu remained close to Nicolae and Elena CeauÃÂescu until the Romanian Revolution of December 1989. On 22 December, he evacuated the Central committee building in Bucharest by helicopter together with them, though he was forced to disembark at Snagov due to excess weight aboard the aircraft.
He was arrested shortly thereafter and detained at the military airbase in Deveselu until 31 December 1989. In early 1990, he was tried alongside Emil Bobu, Ion DincÃÂ, and Tudor Postelnicu and sentenced to life imprisonment for participation in genocide. On appeal, the sentence was reduced to ten years. He served two years in prison and was released on 12 November 1992 due to poor health.
As a result of his conviction, MÃÂnescu was stripped of his membership in the Romanian Academy.
MÃÂnescu was married to Maria Munteanu MÃÂnescu, a prominent pediatrician. In December 1973, she was appointed Vice Chairwoman of the Romanian Red Cross Society and in April 1978 became a member of the National Council of Women. It is not clear whether the couple had any children.
MÃÂnescu died in February 2009 at the age of 92. He was buried at Bellu Cemetery in Bucharest.