Historical Presidents
Confindustria

1910  1913

Louis Bonnefon

Born in Arles (France) in 1873
Born in Turin, he comes from a solid industrial dynasty.
In 1901, he founded the company 'B. Craponne e Viganò', active in the textile-silk sector, with several factories around Turin.
In Turin, he owns a banking and finance house.
President of the Piedmont Silk and Bacological Association and later of the Industrial League of Turin.

1914  1918

Ferdinando Bocca

Born in Turin in 1870. Worked with his father Andrea in his old tanning business.
In 1905, he founded the Società anonima Concerie Italiane riunite - SACIR, of which he has been president since its foundation.
Bound by friendship with the mayor of Turin, Teofilo Rossi, he promoted the great international exhibition in Turin in 1911.
Later, he was the animator of the other great Turin exhibition in 1928.
In Turin, municipal councillor and President of the Chamber of Commerce.

1919  1919

Dante Ferraris

Born in Viarigi (Asti) on 7 June 1868.
He entered industrial life in 1893 in Turin.
He began his career at Diatto Automobili, first as director, then as managing director.
He founded Industrie Metallurgiche, of which he was also chairman; Officine Meccaniche Napoletane for railway material; the Società Proiettili; and the Gruppo Industriale Piemontese for artillery material.
Senator of the Kingdom since 1919.
Minister of Industry, Trade and Labour under Francesco Saverio Nitti from 23 June 1919 to 21 May 1920.

1910  1913

Giovan Battista Pirelli

Born in Varenna (Como) on 27 December 1848.Graduated in engineering.Founded a rubber processing plant in Milan in 1872 that developed rapidly to become the nucleus of a large industrial organisation.
The manufacture of insulated electrical conductors began in 1880, followed by telecommunication cables and tyres.
He founded the linoleum industry in Italy.
Senator of the Kingdom since 1909

1919 1920

John Silvestri

Born in Genoa on 24 October 1858. He is a pioneer of the Italian mechanical industry. He founded the company, which after various transformations took the name Officine Meccaniche già Miani e Silvestri & C. Grondone, Comi & C., he started working for the company in 1885, later becoming its President.
President of the Executive Commission and the National Committee for Italian Exports and Exports Abroad. President of Assonime. Industrial expert, he lent his services to customs negotiations involving Italy. Senator of the Kingdom since 1924.

1920 1921

Ettore

Accounts

Born in Milan on 24 April 1871.
A pioneer of electrical applications and the exploitation of hydraulic forces in Italy, he founded and presided over many of the major industrial and financial companies of the first half of the 20th century: the Società Imprese Elettriche Conti, the Società Idroelettrica Ligure, the Unione Esercizi Elettrici, the Società Elettrica Riviera di Ponente, the Società Pavese di Elettricità A. Volta, the Officine Elettriche di Novara, the Società Orobia for gas and electricity, the Società Elettrica Piemonte Orientale, the Società Idroelettrica Piemonte, the Società Nazionale per lo Sviluppo delle imprese Elettriche, the Società Generale Elettrica dell'Adamello.
President of Assonime and Banca Commerciale. Senator of the Kingdom since 1919.

Ettore Conti

1922  1923

Raimondo Targetti

Born in Florence on 8 November 1869.
He founded Lanificio Nazionale Targetti and contributed to the development and growing success of the wool industry in Italy and abroad.
In 1907, he was called to the Royal Commission for the Study of the Economic Customs Regime and Trade Treaties, and was its rapporteur for the wool category.
Senator of the Kingdom since 1939.
Raimondo Targetti

1923  1934

Antonio Stefano Benni

Born in Cuneo on 18 April 1880.
Together with Ercole Marelli, he helped set up the Ercole Marelli & C. company for the construction of electrical machinery and later became its president.
He holds numerous positions in industrial, banking and commercial companies.
Member of the Higher Economic and Labour Council.
Member of Parliament since 1921, Minister of Communications from January 1935 to October 1939.
Antonio Stefano Benni

1934 1934

Alberto Pirelli 

Born in Genoa on 24 October 1858. He is a pioneer of the Italian mechanical industry. He founded the company, which after various transformations took the name Officine Meccaniche già Miani e Silvestri & C. Grondone, Comi & C., he started working for the company in 1885, later becoming its President.
President of the Executive Commission and the National Committee for Italian Exports and Exports Abroad. President of Assonime. Industrial expert, he lent his services to customs negotiations involving Italy. Senator of the Kingdom since 1924.
Alberto Pirelli

1934 1943

Giuseppe Volpi of Misurata

Born in Milan on 24 April 1871.
A pioneer of electrical applications and the exploitation of hydraulic forces in Italy, he founded and presided over many of the major industrial and financial companies of the first half of the 20th century: the Società Imprese Elettriche Conti, the Società Idroelettrica Ligure, the Unione Esercizi Elettrici, the Società Elettrica Riviera di Ponente, the Società Pavese di Elettricità A. Volta, the Officine Elettriche di Novara, the Società Orobia for gas and electricity, the Società Elettrica Piemonte Orientale, the Società Idroelettrica Piemonte, the Società Nazionale per lo Sviluppo delle imprese Elettriche, the Società Generale Elettrica dell'Adamello.
President of Assonime and Banca Commerciale. Senator of the Kingdom since 1919.

Giuseppe Volpi of Misurata

1943  1943

John Balella

Born in Florence on 8 November 1869.
He founded Lanificio Nazionale Targetti and contributed to the development and growing success of the wool industry in Italy and abroad.
In 1907, he was called to the Royal Commission for the Study of the Economic Customs Regime and Trade Treaties, and was its rapporteur for the wool category.
Senator of the Kingdom since 1939.
John Balella

1943  1943

Giuseppe Mazzini

Born in Livorno on 7 April 1883.Industrial engineer.
Managing director for over thirty years of the large Officine Vay Assauto in Asti.
Chairman and director of several other industrial companies.
Member of Parliament from 1921 to 1939.
As a Member of Parliament, from 1922 to 1934 he prepared the annual reports on the finance budget on behalf of the Budget Committee.
Member of the Treaty Council.
He was president of Confindustria, as ministerial commissioner, from 9 August to 9 September 1943

Giuseppe Mazzini

1944 1945

Fabio Friggeri

Born in Rome on 3 November 1884. An expert in the problems of transport, in whose sector he carried out important managerial tasks on behalf of the state administration, he subsequently dedicated himself to various industrial activities.
General manager of the Avezzano Distilleries and later of the Avezzano Sugar Factory, board member of the National Sugar Producers' Consortium from 1927 to 1947.
President of Banca del Fucino.
Appointed deputy commissioner of Confindustria by the government in September 1944, he was among the promoters of its reconstitution.

Fabio Friggeri

1945 1955

Angelo Costa 

Born in Genoa on 18 April 1901.
University of Genoa Business School.
In 1925, he joined the family business, strengthening its activities in the field of oil production and refining, and in 1936, he entered the shipping business.
A convinced liberalist, he denounced the constraints imposed by the fascist regime as aimed at establishing a controlled economy. He always emphasises the vital importance of small and medium-sized enterprises for the country's industrial development.
President of Ente Bacini S.p.A., Banca Passatore & C., Stabilimento Duca Visconti di Modrone and Vice President of Cotonificio Cantoni in Milan.
Knight of Labour.

Angelo Costa

1955  1961

Alighiero De Micheli 

Born in Milan on 20 December 1904.
At a very young age, he joined his father's company, an elastic fabric factory, while attending law school at the University of Milan.
He took over the management of the company, in his field one of the largest in Europe, and became President of Assolombarda in 1946.
A director of numerous industrial and banking companies (the Lanificio di Somma lombardo, the Cotonificio di Spoleto, the Banca di Credito Artigiano and the Banco di Sicilia), he is also present in European business organisations such as Unice and Cife.
President of the Brera Art Gallery and the Poldi-Pezzoli Museum. Member of the Institute of International Politics and Bocconi University

Alighiero De Micheli

1961 1966

Furio Cicogna

Born in Asti on 21 June 1891.
Degree in business and economics.
Hired by Bombrini and Parodi in 1913, he moved to Manifatture Cotoniere Meridionali in 1921.
In 1925, managing director of Chatillon and later its president.
He founded his two companies in the early 1950s: Stampa Tessuti Artistici and Neyercord Italiana. These were joined by various participations and positions in industrial companies and banks.
President of Assolombarda in 1955.
He distinguished himself in the cultural and charitable field: President of the Bocconi University and the Hospice Sacra Famiglia: main founder of the Italian Student House at the University City of Paris.

Furio Cicogna

1966 1970

Angelo Costa 

Born in Genoa on 18 April 1901.
University of Genoa Business School.
In 1925, he joined the family business, strengthening its activities in the field of oil production and refining, and in 1936, he entered the shipping business.
A convinced liberalist, he denounced the constraints imposed by the fascist regime as aimed at establishing a controlled economy. He always emphasises the vital importance of small and medium-sized enterprises for the country's industrial development.
President of Ente Bacini S.p.A., Banca Passatore & C., Stabilimento Duca Visconti di Modrone and Vice President of Cotonificio Cantoni in Milan.
Knight of Labour.

Angelo Costa

1970 1974

Renato Lombardi 

Born in Naples on 11 June 1906.
Graduated from the University of Rome in Electronic Engineering in 1928. Winner of the 'A. Volta' scholarship, he obtained a master's degree at the University of California, Standford.
Back in Italy, he was hired in 1932 by CGE in Milan, where he began a rapid career until he became head of the power plant service.
In 1944, he switched to the wool industry, completely restructuring the Grignasco Spinning Mill and the Bozzalla and Lesna Wool Mill.
From 1958 to 1963, president of the Italian National Wool Industrial Association and from 1959 to 1963 of the International Wool Federation.
President of Assonime since 1959.
President of the International Chamber of Commerce in Paris.
Vice President of Banca Subalpina.
Deputy chairman of the Wool Financial Institute, managing director of Credito lombardo and the Italian Metallurgical Society.

Renato Lombardi

1974  1976

Gianni Agnelli

Born in Turin on 12 March 1921.
Graduated in Law from the University of Turin.
He took part in World War II as a Cavalry Officer on the Russian front with the Italian Expeditionary Corps, with the Armoured Expeditionary Regiment 'Lodi' in Tunisia, earning the Military Cross for Valour, and in the 'Legnano' Division of the Italian Liberation Corps.
He joined Fiat in 1943 as Deputy Chairman, and in 1963 was appointed Managing Director.
From April 1966 to February 1996 President of the Society and later Honorary President.
Chairman of IFI - Istituto Finanziario Industriale SpA and EXOR GROUP SA, the Giovanni Agnelli Foundation and the Società Editrice 'La Stampa'.
Member of the Board of Directors of Eurafrance, the International Advisory Council of the Chase Manhattan Corporation, the Board of Trustees of the Salomon R. Guggenheim Foundation.
Actively involved in multinational bodies aimed at fostering international relations. Member of the Advisory Board of the Bilderberg Meetings, the International Advisory Board of the Council on Foreign Relations, and Honorary President of the Association for European Monetary Union. Corresponding member of the Academy of Moral and Political Sciences of the Institut de France. He is also a member of the Chairman's Council of the Museum of Modern Art in New York. Senator for life since June 1991.
Mayor of Villa Perosa from 1945 to 1980.
Gianni Agnelli

1976 1980

Guido

Carli

Born in Brescia on 28 March 1914.
Degree in Law from the University of Padua.
He began his career at Iri.
PLI deputy in the Constituent Assembly. A scholar of international economic and financial problems, he joined the Board of Directors of the Italian Exchange Office and in 1947 became a member for Italy on the Board of Directors of the International Monetary Fund. Minister for Foreign Trade in the years 1957-1958. In 1959, he was appointed Chairman of the Credit Consortium for Public Works, Director General of the Bank of Italy, member of the Management Committee of the Bank for International Settlements and of the Monetary Committee of the EEC.
From 1960 to 1975 Governor of the Bank of Italy. President of the Ufficio Italiano dei Cambi, Deputy Governor for Italy of the IMF, the International Financial Corporation and the International Development Association.
President of the LUISS Board of Directors and President of UNICE.
Elected senator in 1983 and re-elected in 1987, he was Minister of the Treasury in the 6th Andreotti government.

Guido Carli

1980 1984

Vittorio Merloni  

Born in Fabriano on 30 April 1933. Graduated in Economics at the University of Perugia. In 1960 he began working in his father's company and in 1970 took over responsibility for the Home Appliances Division. In 1975, the Division was transformed into a joint-stock company and Vittorio Merloni became its President. Fineldo controls Merloni Elettrodomestici SpA, Merloni Progetti SpA, M.P. Energy and Faber Factor; it also has significant stakes in Benelli, Panini and Cinecittà Servizi. Merloni Elettrodomestici has a turnover of Lire 2,837 billion and 7,700 employees, operates with three brands: Scholtès, Ariston and Indesit, 11 production plants in 5 European countries and 21 trading companies. Member of the Harvard Business School in Boston from 1981 to 1994. Knight of Labour since 1984. Member of Censis and Fondazione Aristide Merloni. Member of the Board of Directors of the Il Sole 24 Ore publishing house.

Vittorio Merloni

1984 1988

Luigi Lucchini 

Born in Casto (BS) on 21 January 1919.
In 1975, appointed Knight of Labour Merit.
From 1978 to 1983 he was president of the Industrial Association of Brescia and a member of the board of Confindustria.
From 1980 to 1982 he was a member of the European Community Advisory Committee representing private steel producers.
On 18 June 1998, the University of Brescia awarded him an honorary degree in Economics and Commerce.
Member of the board of Confindustria and Associazione Industria Bresciana.
Chairman of the Board of Directors of: Banca Commerciale Italiana SpA, Compagnia di Partecipazioni Assicurative e Industriali, Compart SpA - Montedison SpA
Lucchini Foundation, Lucchini SpA.
Sole Director of: SINPAR Società di Investimenti e Partecipazioni SpA.
Vice President of: Consortium SpA - Institute of Banking Culture.
Member of the Board of Directors of: Assicurazioni Generali SpA (Member also of the Executive Committee), Associazione Bancaria Italiana, Eridania Bèghin Say S.A.
ISPI - Institute for International Policy Studies, Mediobanca SpA,
Olivetti SpA.
President of the Block Syndicate of:
Gemina SpA.
Luigi Lucchini

1988  1992

Sergio Pinifarina

Born in Turin on 8 September 1926. Graduated in Mechanical Engineering. Started work in his father's industry, Carrozzeria Pininfarina, in 1950. In 1959-1968 he started and completed the design and construction of a new plant in Grugliasco (Turin).
In 1960, he took over as General Manager of the company and a year later also as Managing Director.
In 1964, he started the construction of a new Study and Research Centre, which was inaugurated in 1966. In 1966 he took over as Chairman of the Company. Since 1970 he has been Honorary Chairman of the Pininfarina Senior Group. From 1974 to 1977 he taught "Bodywork Design" at Turin Polytechnic. July 1978 - June 1984: President of the Industrial Union of Turin. July 1979 - June 1988: Member of the European Parliament.
October 1983 - June 1988: President of the Federation of Industrial Associations of Piedmont. May 1987 - June 1989: President of OICA (Organisation Internationale des Constructeurs d'Automobiles). January - July 1997: Director of AUME (Association pour l'Union Monètaire de l'Europe). Delegate for Italy. December 1990 - December 1994: Vice President of UNICE (Union of Industrial and Employers' Confederations of Europe).
March 1993 - July 1996: Chairman of the Leonardo - Italian Quality Committee.
Main positions held: Co-Chairman of the Committee for the European Transpadana Route, Chairman of Fidia SpA, Fondo Interbancario d'Investimento Azionario, Vice Chairman Banca CRT SpA.
Board Member of Directors of: Ferrari SpA, Toro Assicurazioni SpA, Banca Passadore, Banca Brignone, LUISS - Libera Università Internazionale Studi Sociali, Cartiere Burgo SpA, Federal Councillor of the Italian Golf Federation. Within the Pininfarina Group: Pininfarina SpA: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Industrie Pininfarina SpA: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Pininfarina Studi e Ricerche SpA: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer, Pininfarina Extra Srl: Honorary Chairman, Senator for Life since September 2005.

Sergio Pininfarina

1992 1996

Luigi
Spruce

Born in Rome on 17 February 1947. Graduated in Law.
From 1978 to 1982 president of the National Committee of Young Entrepreneurs of Confindustria. From 1983 to 1986 president of the Industrial Federation of Lazio.
Since 1991 Member of the CNEL - National Economic and Labour Council.
Since 1993 President of LUISS Guido Carli University.
Managing Director of Cinecittà Holding SpA, as well as President of Cinecittà Servizi SpA, the company that implemented and managed the privatisation of the Cinecittà complex.
President of A.BE.T.E. SpA - Azienda Beneventana Tipografica Editoriale, a financial company operating in the graphic-cartographic, publishing and tourism-hotel sectors.
Member of the Board of Directors of Siemens SpA and shareholder of Ente Cassa di Risparmio di Roma.
Since 1998 President of Banca Nazionale del Lavoro SpA.

Luigi Abete

1996 2000

Giorgio Fossa

Born in Gallarate (Va) on 1 September 1954. Degree in Law. Industrial entrepreneur, mechanical sector. Sole director of Silvio Fossa S.p.A, a company operating in the design, processing and assembly of hydraulic, pneumatic and rotating, standard and special cylinders. Diversified his activities by investing in companies operating in the manufacturing and financial sectors. Since March 1982, limited partner of Marmont Sas. Since October 1990, director of "Industria e Università Srl".
Since December 1992, managing partner of Gieffe SS and Nicto SS, operating in the securities and real estate sector. From 1995 to 1996 Chairman of the Board of Directors of Il Sole 24Ore
Since December 1996, Director of LUISS. Since April 1998, member of the board of directors of Valentino SpA and member of the board of directors of the Libero Istituto Universitario Cattaneo (LIUC). Associative positions: from 1985 to 1987 Chairman of the Mechanical Merchandise Group of the Industrialists' Association of the Province of Varese; from 1987 to 1993 Chairman of the Small Industry Committee of the Industrialists' Association of the Province of Varese; from 1987 to 1996 Member of the National Committee and of the Central Council of Small Industry of Confindustria, from May 1992 Member of the Executive Council of Confindustria. From 1993 to 1996 President of the Central Council for Small Industry and Vice President of Confindustria; from 1994 to 1996 Vice President for Industrial Policy of Confindustria and President of the Technical Committee for Economy and Enterprise of Confindustria
Since August 1997 Vice President UNICE - Union des Confédération et des Employeurs d'Europ; since July 1997 Member of the Board of Directors AUME - Association pour l'Union Monétaire de l'Europe.
Giorgio Fossa

2000 2004

Antonio D'Amato

Born in Naples on 16 June 1957.
A law graduate, he took over the leadership of Cartoprint at a very young age and later of other companies in the Finseda group, founded by his father Salvatore, of which he became chairman in 1991.
Europe's leading food packaging manufacturer, with plants in Arzano and other areas in Italy, Finseda employs around 2000 people and produces 50 per cent of its turnover abroad, in Germany, Belgium, Great Britain and Portugal.
President of the Young Entrepreneurs, first in Naples and then at national level from 1986 to 1990.
In Confindustria he was in charge of Southern Italy from 1996 to 1999 and, since June 1999, president of the Industrialists' Union of Naples.
Vice-president of Unice and advisor to Cnel.
From 2001 to 2004 President of Luiss Guido Carli
Antonio D'Amato

2004  2008

Luca Cordero di Montezemolo

Born in Bologna on 31 August 1947. Law degree. Specialisation in International Commercial Law at Columbia University, New York
Degree Honoris Causa in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Modena and in Management. Integrated Business Management from the CUOA Foundation in Vicenza. FIAT Chairman. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Ferrari. Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Maserati. Chairman of the Bologna International Trade Fair.
President of Luiss, Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali Guido Carli
Member of the Board of Directors of:
La Stampa, PPR - Pinault/Printemps Redoute
Tod's, Merloni Elettrodomestici, Campari
Bologna Calcio.
He has held the offices of: President of the FIEG - Italian Federation of Newspaper Publishers
Board Member of Unicredit Banca d'Impresa, President of the Industrialists of the Province of Modena, Managing Director of RCS Video, Board Member of TF1, General Manager of the Organising Committee of the World Cup ITALIA '90, Managing Director of Cinzano International and responsible for the organisation of Azzurra in Geneva, Managing Director of ITEDI
Director of External Relations of the FIAT Group. Team Manager of Scuderia Ferrari
Assistant to Enzo Ferrari. Nominated by the Financial Times as one of the fifty best managers in the World in 2004. He founded Charme, a financial-entrepreneurial fund, with which he acquired Poltrona Frau in 2003 and Ballantyne in 2004.
Luca Cordero di Montezemolo

2008 2012

Emma Marcegaglia

Born in Mantua in 1965.
Degree in Business Administration.
Master's degree in Business Administration from New York University.
Chief Executive Officer of Marcegaglia S.p.A. and all its subsidiaries. Chairman of the Areté Onlus Foundation for the support of the activity; Vita-Salute San Raffaele. Permanent member of the "Enterprise Policy Group - Professional Chamber" and of the Executive Committee of the Aspen Institute Italia
He has held the positions of: Vice President of Confindustria for Europe
National President of the Young Entrepreneurs of Confindustria
President of YES (Young Entrepreneurs for Europe), National Vice President of Young Entrepreneurs of Confindustria.
Emma Marcegaglia

2012
2016

Giorgio Squinzi

Giorgio Squinzi, from Milan, was born on 18 May 1943, is married and has two children. He has a degree in Industrial Chemistry from the University of Milan. In 1970, he co-founded Mapei S.n.c. with his father (which expanded the previous activity of the Mapei company founded in 1937 by his father himself), taking on, in particular, responsibility for the technological research and development area. In 1976, with the establishment of Mapei S.p.A., he became its General Manager.
In 1978, the company began the process of internationalisation, founding its first foreign organisation in Canada.
In December 1984, he became Sole Director of Mapei. Currently, the industrial Group is made up of 70 associated companies, with 54 production plants, 9 of which operate in Italy and the others in the rest of the world, in 31 countries on 5 continents. The Group's total turnover in 2011 was EUR 2.1 billion. There are 7500 direct employees. One of the most significant achievements of his entrepreneurial career is that he has never made redundancies due to staff reductions and has never asked for redundancy payments. He is the author of numerous technical articles, published in national and international journals. He is fluent in English, French, German and Spanish. In 1989, he was elected Chairman of Technical Committee 67 WG3 "Adhesives for ceramic tiles" of CEN - European Committee for Standardisation. He is the Italian representative in Technical Committee 189 ISO.
On 7 December 1996 he was awarded the 'Ambrogino d'oro' by the Mayor of Milan for his commitment as an entrepreneur and sportsman in favour of the city of Milan. On 6 April 1998 he was awarded the highest honour of 'Cavaliere di S. Gregorio Magno' in the Vatican. On 2 June 1998, he was appointed 'Cavaliere del Lavoro' (Knight of Labour). On 21 December 1998, he was appointed 'Commandeur de l'Ordre de la Couronne' in Belgium. On 10 December 2002, the Milan Polytechnic awarded him an honorary degree in Chemical Engineering. On 4 December 2006, he received the prestigious Leonardo Qualità Italia Award from the President of the Republic Giorgio Napolitano, and on 5 June 2007, he received the Barocco Award in the 'industrial' category. From June 2005 to June 2011, he was once again President of Federchimica, the National Federation of the Chemical Industry, of which he had already been President from 1997 to 2003. He has been Vice President of the 'Leonardo da Vinci' National Museum of Science and Technology since July 2009, representing the City of Milan. From October 2010 to September 2012, he was President of CEFIC, the European Chemical Industry Association, whose 29,000 member companies represent a quarter of the world's chemical production. He was the first entrepreneur to be elected to lead CEFIC, which was previously chaired by managers. From June 2011 to May 2012 he was Senior Advisor of the Bank of Italy.
A member of the Board of Directors and Council of Confindustria, he was Vice-President with responsibility for innovation and technological development from July 2003 to May 2004; since May 2010 he has been President of the Technical Committee with responsibility for Europe. Since 24 May 2012 he has been President of Confindustria.
Giorgio Squinzi

2016
2020

Vincenzo Boccia

Elected on 25 May 2016, he is the 30th president of the Association. He succeeds Giorgio Squinzi and will be in office for the four-year period 2016-2020.
Born in 1964 with a degree in Economics and Commerce, he is Managing Director of Arti Grafiche Boccia SpA in Salerno, a company that has been operating in the graphics sector for over 50 years, particularly in the segment of printing specialised periodicals, newspapers, books and printed matter for large-scale distribution.
He has been a member of the Young Entrepreneurs Group since the early 1990s, rising to the position of National Vice President in 2000.
He was President of Confindustria Assafrica&Mediterraneo and a member of the Council and Board of Assografici.
From 2009 to 2013 he was President of the Small Industry of Confindustria.
During Squinzi's presidency, he led the Technical Committee on Credit and Finance.
Vincenzo Boccia

2020 
2024

Carlo Bonomi

Carlo Bonomi was the President of Confindustria from 2020 to 2024.
He is an entrepreneur in the biomedical sector, Chairman of Gruppo MedTech S.p.A. (Sidam S.r.l., Emotec S.r.l.).
He is Chairman of Fiera Milano S.p.A., member of the Board of Directors of Fiere di Parma S.p.A. (from March 2023), of the Board of Directors of Bocconi University and independent Director of Muzinich & Co. SGR S.p.A. He is also Chairman of the Boards of Directors of Ocean S.r.l. and Marsupium S.r.l.
Active in Confindustria since his participation in the Young Entrepreneurs Movement, he has been a member of the confederation's governing bodies both at territorial level, until his election as President of Assolombarda from 2017 to 2020, and at national level, holding, among others, the position of President of the Technical Group for Taxation from 2016 to 2020.
Carlo Bonomi

from
2024

Emanuele Orsini

Emanuele Orsini was born in Sassuolo in 1973.
In 1992, after graduating from high school, he joined Sistem Costruzioni, a leading company in the field of timber construction and industrial logistics, the parent company of a group of 10 other companies, and became Managing Director in 2014.
He is President of Maranello Residence, one of the main subsidiary and associated companies of Sistem Costruzioni and the first residential complex dedicated to the world of the Prancing Horse.
In 2020, after the death of his father-in-law Lanfranco Fiandri, founder of Tino Prosciutti S.p.A., he took over as President with powers delegated to Parma's investment and development, contributing to the expansion of the industrial site - which will increase from four to five production plants by 2025 - and increasing the share of exports to new non-EU markets, including the United States of America, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the People's Republic of China.
Despite his numerous corporate commitments, he always actively participates in association life.
Since 2013 he has held the position of President of Assolegno before being elected in 2017 as President of FederlegnoArredo, the Italian Federation of Wood, Cork, Furniture and Furnishing Industries. During his tenure, he was responsible for setting up a collegial Federation based on the system of delegations and divided into three operating units: the first dedicated to the Furniture Fair, the second to Made Expo, the building and architecture fair, and finally the third dedicated to the Events area, with the aim of providing services to members.
Among the most significant projects realised during his presidency are the reconstruction of the kindergarten in Finale Emilia (MO), destroyed in the 2012 earthquake; the construction of a new school of over 2,000 square metres donated to the town; and the completion of the ITS Rosario Messina Foundation building in Lentate sul Seveso (MB), which now houses around 250 students.
Since 2015 he has been a Member of the Board of Confindustria Modena and Head of the Miscellaneous Section of the same association, and since 2016 a Member of the Industry and Environment Technical Group.
In 2017, he joined the General Council of Confindustria and the Technical Group for Internationalisation.
In 2020, at the height of the pandemic, he was appointed Vice President of Confindustria with responsibility for Credit, Finance and Taxation, focusing the beginning of his tenure on finding emergency financial and fiscal measures to support companies in the greatest economic difficulty. A commitment that will enable companies to access EUR 300 billion in financing, with EUR 2.8 million in transactions and EUR 140 billion in moratoria.
In 2013 he became Vice Chairman of Unicredit Leasing, a UniCredit Group company and one of Italy's leading leasing companies, to become its Chairman from 2018 to 2021. In 2018 he was awarded the Diploma of Environmental Merit by the Minister of the Environment and Protection of the Sea for the numerous eco-sustainable projects carried out in providing emergency housing solutions in the Marche Region following the earthquake in central Italy.
Emanuele Orsini

Milestones of a century of industrial leadership

1886
1910

The origins of Confindustria

For almost half a century after unification, Italy had remained poised between backwardness and development due to the scarcity of raw materials and energy resources, high levels of illiteracy and the existence of vast pockets of endemic misery, not only in the south of the peninsula.

Against this backdrop, the formation of the first industrial base - which took place between the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th century - was a far from smooth process, accompanied by a slow change of opinion among the political class of the time with respect to the idea that Italy's wealth lay solely, or almost solely, in agriculture.

In fact, in 1887, Parliament passed a protectionist regime in favour of the fledgling iron and steel industry and the textile sector, at the same time as a similar measure to support cereal production.

A number of entrepreneurial leagues appeared to support the claims of various industries, but failed to gain a foothold in an economic environment dominated by the interests of large landowners and high finance.

It was only at the beginning of the 20th century, when Italy too began to participate in the international expansionary conjuncture, that the cause of industrialism gained ground.

Between 1902 and 1906, the first territorial associations sprang up, from the one in Monza to the one in Turin, alongside the trade associations (the first had been the wool association) that had been set up in previous years in some centres such as Biella, Milan, Genoa, Schio and Terni.

From these first nuclei of entrepreneurial associations that sprung up in no particular order, the 'Italian Confederation of Industry' was born on 5 May 1910, with the aim of coordinating entrepreneurs' initiatives on a national level both in their relations with the government and local administrations and with trade union organisations.

The first President of the Confederation was Louis Bonnefon, a silk industrialist who had moved from Lyon to Piedmont, the pride of that pioneering manufacturing industry which, among the few at that time, was able to export.

Luigi Einaudi called the birth of the new confederation the symbol of the 'Italy that works and produces'.

First based in Turin - and later from 1919 in Rome - Confindustria would, together with the newly founded General Confederation of Labour in 1906, handle disputes between capital and labour, as in the more modern industrial relations systems already in place in Great Britain, France and Germany.

Louis Bonnefon

1911
1922

The Giolitti era and the Great War

In the second decade of the 1920s, dominated by the figure of Giovanni Giolitti, the adoption of the collective labour agreement and the recognition of internal workers' commissions coincided with a social-political turn in a liberal and reformist direction.

The equation between industrialism and modernisation was shared, albeit with different accents, by the main trade union leaders - Rinaldo Rigola, Ludovico D'Aragona, Bruno Buozzi - and by a number of entrepreneurs who had established themselves at that time, such as Giovanni Agnelli, Camillo Olivetti, the Perrone brothers, Guido Donegani, Cesare Pesenti, Giorgio Enrico Falck, Ettore Conti, Giovanni Battista Pirelli, Gaetano Marzotto, Ernesto Breda and Giuseppe Orlando.

It was this new generation of industrialists that made the entrepreneurial associationism of the early 20th century a robust instrument for protecting the specific interests of the industrial world, a forge of new solutions in the organisation of work.

The contribution of Gino Olivetti - the first secretary of the Industrial League of Turin and later of Confindustria - proved to be fundamental in this respect for the rationalisation of the production system, starting with the mechanical engineering industry, adopting the same criteria elaborated in the United States by Frederick Taylor: the key words were specialisation of workers, standardisation of materials and mass production.

The historical gap between the North and South of the country remained perfectly tangible and, on the other hand, savings continued to flow mostly into government bonds. Only thanks to the entry of some banks into the share capital of the electricity industry and other basic sectors was it possible to cope with the shortage of risk capital.

Italy had emerged victorious from the Great War, also thanks to the exceptional effort made by the industrial system to meet the needs of the war machine. In the meantime, however, the communist revolution in Russia was fuelling expectations of a radical political and social upheaval among the working masses.

Confindustria, after the appointment of Ferdinando Bocca, under the chairmanships of Dante Ferraris (who became Minister of Industry in the Nitti government in 1919), Giovanni Battista Pirelli, Giovanni Silvestri and Ettore Conti, tried to contain a long series of strikes and unrest through various measures (reduction in working hours, redundancy payments, invalidity and old age insurance) without, however, succeeding.

Until, in September 1920, the workers of the main factories throughout Italy proceeded to occupy the factories. These occupations lasted for a month and gave the impression that we were on the eve of an insurrectional movement.

Raimondo Targetti

1923
1943

The fascist period

In this climate, made all the more difficult by extreme political instability and the serious financial difficulties of post-war reconversion, the fascist movement seized power: although Mussolini had proclaimed the strengthening of the production apparatus and maximum discipline in the factories in the name of national interests, the main trade confederations deplored the violence of squadrism.

After the assassination of Giacomo Matteotti, the Confindustria executive called for the restoration of constitutional order and legality with a memorandum presented to Mussolini in September 1924. It also continued its tenacious resistance both to the imposition of the fascist monopoly of workers' representation and to the projects of integral corporatism.

It was only in October 1925, when the workers' unions and anti-fascist parties were on the verge of being banned, that Confindustria recognised - with the Palazzo Vidoni Pact - the fascist union as its only interlocutor.

In the years between the two wars, severely marked by the world 'great crisis' of 1929, the fascist regime granted industry assistance and protection, similar to what other governments did when faced with a recession that threatened to unhinge the entire production system. Public intervention, which led to the creation of the IRI in 1933, saved numerous companies from bankruptcy, thus bringing them under 'public hands'.

Subsequently, the autarkic policy favoured the advent of monopolistic and oligopolistic positions, at the price of a progressive isolation of Italian industry from international market circuits and to the detriment of technological innovations.

During this period, after a brief presidency by Raimondo Targetti, there was the long tenure of Antonio Stefano Benni (1923-1934), who also served as Minister of Communications (1935-1939) and, under his presidency, the logo of the cogwheel topped by the eagle was born, which, in its modernised version, still represents the Confederation today.

In the following years, prominent figures such as Alberto Pirelli and Senator Giuseppe Volpi, who remained in office from 1934 to 1943, alternated at the head of Confindustria.

But the Confindustria, however accredited and influential in the upper echelons of the Regime - also due to the close relations established by its Director (and later President from April 1943), Giovanni Balella, with various Ministries and sectors of the PA - found itself grappling with ruralism, anti-urbanism and the formation of a corporative and hierarchical order ('everything within the State, nothing outside the State', according to Mussolini's directives), elements that ended up representing the negation of the principles of industrial capitalism.

Giuseppe Mazzini

1944
1950

Post-war reconstruction

In the aftermath of the Second World War, Confindustria took a leading role in the reconstruction effort. This was mainly thanks to Angelo Costa, President of the Association from 1945 to 1955, who arrived after the brief periods of transitional presidency by Giuseppe Mazzini and Fabio Friggeri following the fall of Fascism and the liberation of Rome.

He was able to establish non-instrumental relations, while respecting their reciprocal spheres of autonomy, with the centrist governments of Alcide De Gasperi and succeeded in rebuilding the fabric of contractual relations with the trade unions.

Right from the start of Costa's term of office, a number of important agreements were signed with the CGIL: the unblocking of redundancies, wage equalisation between North and South, the reinstatement of the Internal Commissions and the establishment of the escalator.

Other agreements, at national and category level, were then concluded during the 1950s with the CISL and the UIL, two new confederations born in 1948 from the separation of the Catholic, Republican and Social Democratic components from the CGIL.

Costa, flanked by a general secretary such as Mario Morelli (who would remain in office until 1970) in the work of defending and enhancing the principles of private initiative, was a strong advocate of the restoration of market mechanisms and trade liberalisation, supporting the choices of the political class, even at the cost of not finding the consensus of some industrial groups reluctant to renounce customs protectionism.

Angelo Costa

1951
1963

The economic miracle

Italy's accession to the European Common Market in 1957 and the so-called 'economic miracle' gave legitimacy to the liberalist convictions of Angelo Costa, still the acknowledged leader of Confindustria. Driven by the vigorous development of the large companies in the 'industrial triangle' - Milan, Turin and Genoa - the national economy recorded some of the highest growth rates in the western world in those years.

The mechanical, automotive, chemical and textile industries experienced a season of expansion, favoured by increased domestic consumption, improved productivity and Italy's growing inclusion in international trade flows. The boom attracted millions of workers from the south to the northern regions, reshaping the country's social geography and posing new challenges to the production system.

These were the years of Alighiero De Micheli's presidency, followed by that of Furio Cicogna, in a context of progressive transformation of the relationship between the state and industry. The establishment of the Ministry of State Holdings (1956) and the start of an economic planning policy that culminated with the nationalisation of electricity in 1962 marked a profound change in the role of public intervention.

This new scenario saw Confindustria position itself as an attentive but critical interlocutor of the centre-left governments' industrial policy choices, with a growing tension between the defence of private initiative and the expansion of public hand in strategic sectors. In this season of great change, the Association consolidated its role as a unitary representative, placing the modernisation of the country and the strengthening of industrial competitiveness at the centre of the debate.

Furio Cicogna

1964
1979

The new headquarters and Il Sole 24 Ore

In the years between the end of the 'economic miracle' and the onset of the social tensions that marked the second half of the century, Confindustria strengthened its representative capacity also in terms of culture and economic information. In 1965, Il Sole 24 Ore was born from the merger of two historic newspapers: Il Sole, founded in Milan in 1865, and 24 Ore, founded in 1946 as the official organ of the Association.

The objective was clear: to create a newspaper capable of offering an authoritative and independent voice on the Italian economic system, promoting the values of enterprise, modernisation and the market.

From its inception, Il Sole 24 Ore established itself as an essential point of reference for entrepreneurs, professionals, institutions and international operators, making a decisive contribution to the spread of an economic and productive culture in the country. With its sober style, technical insights and attention to the dynamics of the world of work, the newspaper became one of the most recognised and respected instruments of the Confindustria system.

In the early 1970s, Confindustria moved from its historical headquarters in Piazza Venezia to the E.U.R. district in Rome, in a new building commissioned to architects Luccichenti and Monaco, among the most significant interpreters of Italian rationalist architecture.

In those years, for the industrial world (to whose leadership Angelo Costa returned in 1966), the difficulties were accentuated and, in the aftermath of the 'hot autumn' of 1969, waves of worker conflict followed one after the other for a decade in the main factories, shaking the foundations of the company system and making factory governance increasingly difficult.

Faced with the danger of isolation, and in the midst of a severe economic recession due to the staggering increase in oil prices and the sharp rise in labour costs, Confindustria reacted with a course correction in two directions: with the so-called 'Pirelli reform' it proposed to strengthen its organisational structures with a more balanced and participatory representation of territorial and trade associations; younger levers and small enterprises, organised since 1958 into various local groups, contributed significantly to an innovative approach.

Faced with the danger of isolation, and in the midst of a severe economic recession due to the staggering increase in oil prices and the sharp rise in labour costs, Confindustria reacted with a course correction in two directions: with the so-called 'Pirelli reform' it proposed to strengthen its organisational structures with a more balanced and participatory representation of territorial and trade associations; younger levers and small enterprises, organised since 1958 into various local groups, contributed significantly to an innovative approach.

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The thaw towards the trade union, initiated during Renato Lombardi's presidency (flanked since 1970 by an experienced and particularly talented manager, Franco Mattei), resulted in 1974, during Giovanni Agnelli's subsequent presidency, in the proposal of a joint action against rents and parasitism, with the aim of restoring impetus and vigour to the productive forces of enterprise and labour.

In this climate, and with the intention of contributing to a return of peace in the factory, the Agreement on wage indexation was signed with the trade unions in January 1975.

To chair Confindustria during the period of 'national solidarity' between the parties of the constitutional arc, intended to tackle the terrorist offensive, a person who did not come from the ranks of business was called for the first time: the former governor of the Bank of Italy, Guido Carli. During his term of office (from 1976 to 1980), which saw an authoritative economist such as Paolo Savona (to whom we owe the operational start-up of the Study Centre) at the helm of the Association, a proposal was formulated by Confindustria for an 'enterprise statute', capable of freeing the entrepreneurial system from the political and bureaucratic 'laces and ties' that were holding back its development.

In 1977, on the initiative of Confindustria, LUISS - Libera Università Internazionale degli Studi Sociali - was founded in Rome with the aim of creating a university centre of excellence capable of training the country's new ruling classes. The university took over the inheritance of the pre-existing Pro Deo, transforming the institute founded in the 1960s into a true private university, specialising in the fields of economics, law and political science.

Particularly innovative for the time was the strong focus on the business world, institutions and public and private decision-making processes. Since 1978, the university's leadership was entrusted to Guido Carli himself, who was able to imprint the university with a modern vision, inspired by liberal culture and Anglo-Saxon pragmatism, and strengthen its ties with the Confindustria system.

In the years that followed, LUISS consolidated its identity as a university open to the world, strengthening its international relations, developing English-language courses and facilitating access to the world of work thanks to one of the most active career services in Europe.

1980
2000

The transformation of Italian industry

In the early 1980s, an important phase in the life of the Confederation coincided with the presidency of Vittorio Merloni. His appointment to the highest responsibility of the Italian industrialists was a tangible recognition of the remarkable development and growing role assumed in the meantime by the Small and Medium-sized Enterprises.

The need for an effective industrial policy and the revision of the wage structure (after the termination of the escalator) were placed at the centre of Confindustria's action under the leadership of Alfredo Solustri, whose professional skills had matured within the association.

Later, during Luigi Lucchini's term of office (1984-1988), the principle of the centrality of business as a driving factor for economic growth and the social modernisation of the country was affirmed. The special experience in the field of trade union and external relations of director Paolo Annibaldi (who held this position until 1990), helped to intensify Confindustria's relations with public institutions and social players.

These were the years of a strong revival of Italian industry, which experienced significant organisational innovations and the expansion of its production facilities into new areas of the country that had once barely been touched by the development process.

The late 1980s and early 1990s witnessed epochal events destined to echo over the following decades in the world's geo-economic order, from the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November 1989 to the break-up of the Soviet Union in late 1991.

Following the signing of the Maastricht Treaty and the acceleration of the European unification process in 1992, the need to internationalise the Italian economy became more and more necessary, also in order to find new spaces in a world set on the path of a new and sustained globalisation.

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For Confindustria, the outcome of the European game would have depended on an overall recovery of competitiveness of the country system. Thanks to the policy of tripartite agreements (government, Confindustria, trade unions) - initiated under the presidency of Sergio Pininfarina (1988-1992) - Italy was able to control inflation and implement an albeit imperfect income policy, avoiding the risks of marginalisation from the more industrialised countries.

Decisive in this respect was the Agreement of 10 December 1991 on the fight against inflation, as a result of which, on 1 May 1992, the 'heavy point' contingency was not paid for the first time. This line continued under the presidency of Luigi Abete (from 1992 to 1996) with the Agreement of 7 July 1992, which established the abolition of the escalator.

In the course of those years, the autonomy and non-partisanship of Confindustria was reaffirmed, outside of any political collateralism, and new criteria for participation in the association system were adopted.

Italy's integration process into the European Community, however, turned out to be much more fraught with obstacles than originally thought, due to a new difficult economic situation. In the years of Tangentopoli (bribery and corruption), the country faced a serious political and institutional crisis.

Despite operating in such troubled waters, with judicial investigations involving a number of large companies, Confindustria managed to stay the course, under the banner of a non-corporate line of conduct that was open to confrontation with civil society, supporting the efforts of Italian companies to increase their levels of competitiveness and engaging in concerted action with the government and trade unions that led to the July 1993 agreement on income policy.

2001
2015

The age of globalisation

The beginning of the new millennium ushers in a phase in which globalisation and technological innovation accelerate profound transformations in the production system, forcing Italian companies to look more and more towards international markets. In this context, Confindustria is taking an active role in promoting competitiveness, innovation and openness, supporting the need to simplify rules, attract investment and strengthen the presence of Italian manufacturing in the world.

Under the presidency of Antonio D'Amato (2000-2004), under the leadership of Stefano Parisi, the confederal action focused on the revitalisation of Southern Italy, labour market reform and support for a modern entrepreneurial culture. The European framework was consolidated with the introduction of the euro, while global pressures from the opening of markets and increasing international competition were growing.

In 2004, Luca Cordero di Montezemolo was called to lead the Association. His mandate marked a strengthening of the public and cultural identity of Confindustria, which became the promoter of a new focus on respect for rules, protection of intellectual property, flexibility and investment in training and research.

Under the leadership of Maurizio Beretta, the Association is enhancing its propensity for internationalisation and the promotion of Made in Italy, which are considered essential pillars for an Italy capable of competing in the new global scenario.

But in 2007, the signs of a deep financial crisis began to appear. The explosion of the subprime mortgage bubble in the United States triggers a chain of events that sweeps Western economies, hitting Italy hard as well. The collapse of market confidence, the credit crunch and the demand crisis translate into a severe industrial slowdown.

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It was in this climate that Emma Marcegaglia took over the presidency in 2008, the first woman at the top of Confindustria, flanked by Giampaolo Galli as General Manager. The industrial system, already fragile, was hit by a wave of recession that put employment and investments at risk.

In recent years, Confindustria has not ceased to promote a culture of sharing within companies, placing the productivity-wage binomial at the centre of the debate between the social partners, and relaunching the dialogue with the trade unions in order to tackle together one of the most difficult phases of recent economic history.

In 2012 the leadership of the Association passed to Giorgio Squinzi, who appointed Marcella Panucci as Director General of the Confederation, the first woman to hold this position. The context remains critical: Italy goes through a new phase of political instability and the economic crisis takes on structural features under the burden of public debt.

The priority becomes defending the manufacturing system, fighting the 'anti-enterprise culture' and relaunching a European Industrial Compact capable of supporting production and employment.

Confindustria is also committed on the internal front with a profound reform of the association system: a Commission, chaired by Carlo Pesenti, starts a process that culminates with the approval of the new organisational structure in 2013. The Confederation thus sought to reaffirm its ability to adapt by reaffirming the principle of representation as a strategic lever for the country's development.

2016
2024

The era of global challenges

In May 2016, Vincenzo Boccia, an entrepreneur from Salerno with long experience in the association system, was elected president of Confindustria. His presidency took place in an economic context characterised by a slow post-crisis recovery, with Italy showing signs of lower growth than other European countries and emerging economies.

During the four years of Boccia's presidency, Confindustria continued to emphasise the centrality of industry as an engine to overcome economic stagnation, promoting initiatives to strengthen the competitiveness of the Italian production system.

These include the implementation of the 'Industry 4.0' plan and the signing of the 'Pact for the Factory' with the trade unions, aimed at boosting productivity by sharing objectives between companies and workers.

The General Assembly in Verona on 16 February 2018 also marked a particularly significant moment, during which Confindustria presented an articulated industrial policy programme, emphasising the importance of concerted action between institutions and companies to tackle the challenges of globalisation and technological innovation.

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In May 2020, at a time marked by the global health emergency caused by the COVID-19 pandemic, the presidency of Confindustria passed to Carlo Bonomi. His election took place through a telematic vote, reflecting the restrictions imposed by the health crisis.

Bonomi took over as head of the organisation at a time of deep economic uncertainty, with Italian industry hard hit first by the health crisis and then by a series of further related crises, from international logistics to soaring inflation and energy.

During the four-year period, the organisation's general management saw the alternation of Francesca Mariotti, in office since July 2020, and Raffaele Langella, appointed in October 2023.

Bonomi's presidency was characterised by his commitment to urging swift and decisive action on the part of the institutions, emphasising the need for an effective industrial policy and concrete support for companies in order to face epoch-making challenges.

At the same time, Confindustria was actively engaged in the fight against the pandemic, with a concrete engagement alongside citizens in the vaccination campaign and in the dialogue with the government for the elaboration and implementation of the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRP), highlighting the urgency of structural reforms in key areas such as taxation, labour and public administration.

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