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Andy Haldane

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Nationality
  
British

Occupation
  
Economist

Name
  
Andy Haldane



Born
  
18 August 1967 (age 56) (
1967-08-18
)

Alma mater
  
University of Sheffield University of Warwick

Education
  
University of Sheffield, University of Warwick

Firms are almost eating themselves andy haldane tells newsnight


Andrew G. "Andy" Haldane, FAcSS (born on 18 August 1967) is the Chief Economist and the Executive Director of Monetary Analysis and Statistics at the Bank of England.

Contents

Andy Haldane Andy Haldane workshop on diversity in the financial system

In 2014 he was named by Time Magazine as amongst the world's 100 most influential people.

Andy Haldane Andy Haldane Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Andy haldane preparing for the next financial crisis


Education

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Haldane attended Guiseley School in north Leeds. He received a BA in Economics from the University of Sheffield in 1988 and an MA in Economics from the University of Warwick in 1989.

Career

Haldane joined the Bank of England in 1989. He worked in monetary analysis, on various issues regarding monetary policy strategy, inflation targeting, and central bank independence. He had a secondment to work at the International Monetary Fund. Haldane's senior experience back in the Bank of England include heading up the International Finance Division and the Market Infrastructure Division. In 2005 Haldane assumed responsibility for the Systemic Risk Assessment Division within the Financial Stability department. In 2009 he became the Bank of England's Executive Director of Financial Stability.

Haldane has been widely cited as a leading Bank of England expert on Financial Stability and is a co-author with Adair Turner and others of the LSE Future of Finance report. His 2012 speech, called "The Dog and the Frisbee"—delivered to the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City's annual Jackson Hole, Wyoming meeting—received widespread attention in the financial media and prompted Forbes to describe him as a "rising star central banker". In the speech, Haldane drew on behavioral economics to argue that complex financial systems cannot be controlled with complex regulations.

In October 2012 Haldane said the Occupy movement protesters had been right to criticise the financial sector and had persuaded bankers and politicians "to behave in a more moral way".

Interviewed on the BBC's The World at One radio programme, ahead of Chancellor's 2012 Autumn Statement, Haldane said the financial effect of the bank crisis, i.e., the loss of income and damage to output was as severe as a world war. He feared the cost would fall on the next generation or even the generation afterwards. Public anger was justified as banks had made loans which could never be repaid and these loans were sold on around the world creating the subprime mortgage crisis. The banks still had undeclared risky assets. In the meantime, bankers pay, which in 1980 was comparable with a doctor or lawyer, had risen by 2006 to four times that value and it needs to fall to that of other professions.

Haldane said in a speech on 4 April 2014 to a financial audience that "too big to fail" risks that are being tackled by reforms at major banks were applicable to the asset-management industry, calling it the "next frontier" for macroprudential policy. He introduced the "non-bank, non-insurer globally systemically important financial institutions” (NBNI G-SIFIs) into the lexicon at this event, and detailed the thrust of regulators as "modulating the price of risk, when this is materially mispriced, could be every bit as important as controlling its quantity".

Personal

Haldane and Martin Brookes co-founded a charity "Pro Bono Economics", which aims to persuade economists to donate their time and expertise to help charities on a pro bono basis. It has partnered with charities such as St Giles Trust and Barnardo's. They tapped Gus O'Donnell to help promote the initiative. It is also backed by Gavyn Davies, former BBC head; Sir Howard Davies, London School of Economics director; Rachel Lomax, former Bank of England deputy director on the Monetary Policy Committee; Adair Turner, who chaired the now-defunct Financial Services Authority; and Jim O’Neill, the Goldman Sachs economist who came up with the "BRIC" term. He also became a trustee of the independent charity National Numeracy in 2016.

Honours

In 2016, Haldane was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS).

Publications

Haldane has authored more than 70 articles and three books on inflation targeting, central bank independence, international financial crises, financial stability frameworks and payment systems, along with notable analysis critical of the remuneration models that divorce capital control from its ownership in the financial services sector, where stewardship bonuses are rewarded regardless of loss or gains to clients, contrary to rational norms of fiduciary duty.

Books:

  • The Future of Payment Systems: 43 (Routledge International Studies in Money and Banking) with Stephen Millard, and Victoria Saporta (2007)
  • Fixing Financial Crises in the 21st Century (Routledge Studies in the Modern World Economy) (2004)
  • References

    Andy Haldane Wikipedia