Heribald Närger

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Heribald Närger (born November 25, 1923 in Liegnitz ; † April 26, 2015 in Grünwald ) was a German business manager.

Heribald Närger studied law at the University of Munich and received his doctorate there in 1949 with the work The Economic Council of the United Economic Area . He then worked as a research assistant at the university's international law department. In 1951 he passed the Great State Examination. He then became a loan officer and assistant to the board of the Bayerische Vereinsbank . Until 1960 he went through several other positions in the bank and was temporarily in Great Britain and the USA. In 1960 he was appointed to the board of directors as responsible for the securities, investment and capital transactions abroad.

In October 1963 Närger became a deputy member of the Managing Board of Siemens & Halske AG . Three years later, in 1966, he became head of the central finance department there. In the same year Siemens & Halske AG, Siemens-Schuckertwerke AG and Siemens-Reiniger-Werke AG merged to form Siemens AG , and the company was divided into corporate and central areas. At the same time, Närger became a full board member. From 1968 to March 1988 he was head of the central finance department and thus CFO at Siemens. During his time as Chief Financial Officer, the company was heavily restructured until 1969. Large reserves were built up, paving the way for expansion in the 1990s. On March 24, 1988, the general meeting elected Närger to the supervisory board, which he immediately took over as chairman, succeeding Bernhard Plettner . In this role, too, he accompanied the reorganization of the company, which was now being carried out by Karlheinz Kaske and Hermann Franz , at the end of which there was a decentralized organizational structure. In 1993 he resigned from the committees.

As a member of the Siemens executive board and later the supervisory board, Närger devoted himself to promoting art and science. He was active in the Ernst von Siemens Art Foundation , with which he acquired valuable paintings and then made them available to the public. With the concept of private cultural funding he developed, the Siemens Arts Program , the foundation supported many young artists. Närger has received numerous awards for his commitment. He was honorary chairman of the board of trustees of the Kulturstiftung der Länder , honorary member of the German Archaeological Institute and in 1991 became honorary senator of the Technical University of Munich .

Fonts

  • The Economic Council of the United Economic Area. Dissertation Munich 1949
  • with Horst Blomeyer-Bartenstein : The inspection complaint and the so-called official insult. 2. Study by the Society for Civil Liberties, Munich (study group) with the statements of the Bavarian regional presidents, mayors and others. Isar-Verlag, Munich 1950
  • Defense against bureaucratic mistakes. Isar-Verlag, Munich 1950 (series of publications by the Society for Civil Liberties Munich, issue 3)
  • with Max Mikorey and Fritzheinrich Curschmann: Imprisonment for the mentally ill. Isar-Verlag, Munich 1950 (series of publications by the Society for Civil Liberties Munich, issue 5)

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Obituary in the FAZ