Boris Lalovac was born on 16 November 1976 in Split to professor Obrad and homemaker Jasminka Lalovac. His father is active in local politics having served as SDP's municipal councilor in Gradac and member of the SDP's Split County Organization. After finishing elementary and high school in his hometown, Lalovac enrolled at the Faculty of Tourism and Foreign Trade of the University of Dubrovnik from which he graduated in year 2000. He gained his masters's degree at the Zagreb Faculty of Economics and Business in year 2006. From 2005 until 2006, he attended seminar "Basics of Credit Analysis" and in 2007 seminar "Finance, controlling, accounting, management", both organised by the Austrian Raiffeisen Bankengruppe.
Career
After graduation, Lalovac first worked as finance associate at a joint-stock companyAuto-Hrvatska in Zagreb. In 2002, he got employed as assistant lecturer on the payments course at the Split Faculty of Economics and Business. He worked on that position until 2007. From 2003 until 2004, Lalovac worked as deputy head of controlling at a limited liability companyKarbon-Nova in Zaprešić. Between 2005 and 2011, he worked at the Raiffeisen Leasing as manager of Accounting, Finance and Reporting department. In 2008, Lalovac got employed as teacher at the Professional Business School of Higher Education LIBERTAS, and in 2010 at the College of Finance and law Effectus teaching courses "Analysis of the financial statements", the "Financial Control and Audit" and "Controlling". He still holds both positions. In 2012, he was named deputy minister of finance in the center-left Cabinet of Zoran Milanović, and in 2014 Minister of Finance succeeding Slavko Linić. Afterwards, he was elected to the Croatian Parliament in 2015 and 2016 parliamentary elections, representing the 10th electoral district.
Personal life
Boris Lalovac is married to Tončika Anastasia Lalovac who is a Croatian Canadian, and a member of the conservative Croatian Democratic Union party. In January 2017, she accused him of verbal and physical harassment, after which he temporarily withdrew from public life. In April 2017, State's Attorney Office rejected all criminal charges filed against him as unfounded. He returned to politics.