Tidjane Thiam, a renowned Ivorian banker and politician, has officially entered the race for the 2025 presidential election in Côte d’Ivoire. On April 18, 2025, the Democratic Party of Côte d’Ivoire (PDCI) confirmed his candidacy after he secured an overwhelming 99.5% of delegate votes. Thiam is now preparing to challenge for the nation’s top office, presenting a campaign rooted in development, transparency, and anti-corruption.
From Elite Education to Global Finance
Born in Abidjan on July 29, 1962, Thiam hails from a prominent political family closely connected to the country’s first president, Félix Houphouët-Boigny. His father, originally from Senegal, served as a minister and journalist under the Houphouët-Boigny administration, while his mother was the president’s niece. His uncle, Habib Thiam, served as Senegal’s prime minister for a decade.
Thiam spent much of his early life in France and became a French citizen in 1987. Academically gifted, he was the first Ivorian to pass the entrance exam to the prestigious École Polytechnique in Paris in 1982. He later attended the École des Mines and completed an MBA at INSEAD while participating in McKinsey’s fellowship program.
Rising Through Government and Business
Thiam began his professional journey at the World Bank in Washington, D.C., and later joined McKinsey & Company, working in New York and Paris. He returned to Côte d’Ivoire in 1994 at the request of then-President Henri Konan Bédié to head the National Bureau of Technical Studies and Development (BNETD), where he negotiated with the IMF and World Bank.
By 1998, he was appointed Minister of Planning and Development, praised for integrating the private sector into key industries and attracting vital foreign investment. In 1999, however, a coup led by General Robert Gué forced Thiam under house arrest. Although offered a top government post, he declined and returned to France.
A Global Finance Leader
In 2000, Thiam became a partner at McKinsey, later joining British insurer Aviva, where he rose to CEO. In 2009, he became the CEO of Prudential plc—the first African to head a FTSE 100 company. He resigned in 2015 to lead Swiss banking giant Credit Suisse, where he launched an ambitious three-year restructuring plan. In 2018, Euromoney named him “Banker of the Year.”
Despite his success, Thiam resigned in 2020 following a corporate surveillance scandal. He also held prominent roles outside the banking sector, including chairing a G20 investment committee, serving on the International Olympic Committee, and acting as the African Union’s COVID-19 special envoy. In 2011, France awarded him the Legion of Honour for his civic contributions.
A Political Comeback
After two decades abroad, Thiam returned to Côte d’Ivoire in 2023 to contest the leadership of the PDCI—the very party founded by his grandfather. He won the party presidency during a convention in Yamoussoukro and began a campaign to revive the party’s structure and voter base.
As required by Ivorian law, he renounced his French citizenship ahead of the election. Thiam is now actively mobilizing support across the country, with his campaign emphasizing economic development, good governance, and the fight against corruption. The presidential election is scheduled for October 2025.