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Evan Davis

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Years active
  
1986–present

Employer
  
BBC

Partner
  
Guillaume Baltz

Role
  
Economist

Name
  
Evan Davis


Evan Davis Evan Davis Newsnight is actually run by 15 to 20year

Full Name
  
Evan Harold Davis

Born
  
8 April 1962 (age 62) (
1962-04-08
)
Malvern, Worcestershire, England

Alma mater
  
St John's College, Oxford Harvard University

Occupation
  
Journalist and TV presenter

Notable credit(s)
  
Dragons' Den (2005—) Today (2008–14) Newsnight (2014—)

Books
  
Public Spending, New Penguin Business Dictionary

Education
  
Harvard University, St John's College, Oxford, The Ashcombe School

TV shows
  
Newsnight, Dragons' Den, Mind the Gap: London v, The City Uncovered

Similar People
  
Guillaume Baltz, Graham Bannock, Emily Maitlis, Melanie Phillips, Kirsty Wark

Profiles

Introduction joseph stiglitz in conversation with evan davis


Evan Harold Davis (born 8 April 1962 in Malvern, Worcestershire) is an English economist, journalist, and presenter for the BBC.

Contents

Evan Davis BBC Blogs TV blog Business Nightmares With Evan Davis

In October 2001, Davis took over from Peter Jay as the BBC's economics editor. He left this post in April 2008 to become a presenter on BBC Radio 4's Today programme. He stood down after the 26 September 2014 edition of Today to become a main presenter on Newsnight, replacing Jeremy Paxman.

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Davis is also the presenter for the BBC Two venture-capitalist programme Dragons' Den, as well as The Bottom Line, a business conversation show, also on BBC Radio 4. He earns £250,000 - £299,999 as a BBC presenter

Evan Davis Evan Davis MediaGuardian 100 2009 Media The Guardian

Evan davis why we have reached peak bullsh t and what we can do about it talks at google


Early life

Evan Davis BBC Press Office Evan Davis to offer BBC Two viewers a

Davis grew up in Ashtead, Surrey. He attended Dorking County Grammar School, which in 1976 became The Ashcombe School, Dorking. Davis then gained a First in Philosophy, Politics and Economics at St John's College, Oxford, which he attended from 1981 to 1984, before obtaining an MPA at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. While at Oxford University, he edited Cherwell, the student newspaper.

Early career

Evan Davis Newsnight review Evan Davis gets off on right foot

Davis began work as an economist at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, and while there he was briefly seconded to help officials work on early development of the Community Charge system of local government taxation (better known as the Poll Tax). In 1988 he moved to the London Business School, writing articles for their publication Business Strategy Review. He returned to the Institute for Fiscal Studies in 1992, writing a paper on "Britain, Europe and the Square Mile" for the European Policy Forum which argued that British financial prosperity depended on being seen as a bridgehead to the European Union.

In 1993, Davis joined the BBC as an economics correspondent. He worked as economics editor on BBC Two's Newsnight programme from 1997 to 2001. In the mid-1990s he was a member of the Social Market Foundation's Advisory Council; he is a member of the British-American Project for a Successor Generation.

BBC

As the BBC's economics editor, Davis was responsible for reporting and analysing economic developments on a range of programmes on BBC radio and television, particularly the Ten O'Clock News. He also had a role in shaping the extensive BBC coverage of economics across all the corporation's outputs, including online.

Davis also wrote a blog for the BBC website entitled Evanomics in which he "attempts to understand the real world, using the tool kit of economics". Subjects he discussed included road pricing, care for the elderly, Gordon Brown's Budget and how to choose wine.

Davis has won several awards including the Work Foundation's Broadcast Journalist of the Year award in 1998, 2001 and 2003, and the Harold Wincott Business Broadcaster of the Year award in 2002. In 2008, Davis was ranked first in the Independent on Sunday's "pink list" of the hundred most influential gay and lesbian figures in British society.

On 23 May 2005, Davis crossed picket lines during a day of industrial action by BBC staff over announced job cuts. Other notable broadcasters who turned up for work during the strike included Terry Wogan, Shelagh Fogarty and Declan Curry. Davis was also noted for breaking a strike at the BBC, called by the National Union of Journalists, on 6 November 2010, when he arrived to present the Today Programme at 3:30am, along with fellow presenter Sarah Montague, not technically crossing a picket line as they arrived before it was formed.

In mid-2007, Davis was a guest presenter on the Today programme for two weeks. In April 2008, he stood down as BBC Economics Editor to join the Today programme as a full-time presenter replacing Carolyn Quinn. In 2009, Davis said that one of the best things about presenting on the radio is that "you can look things up on Wikipedia while on air".

On top of his duties at Today, Davis also presents The Bottom Line, a weekly discussion programme on Radio 4 as well as Dragons' Den on BBC Two.

In 2012, Davis presented Built in Britain which looked at the role of major infrastructure projects in the UK, including examining the impact of the M25 on the town of Ashtead in Surrey where he grew up.

In 2014, Davis presented a BBC Two series Mind the Gap: London vs the Rest in which he explored the economic forces in Britain and why the capital city is so dominant.

On 21 July 2014, it was announced that Davis would replace Jeremy Paxman as presenter of Newsnight starting in Autumn 2014. His last appearance as a presenter on Today was 26 September 2014.

Writing

Davis' 1998 book Public Spending was published by Penguin. In it he argued for the privatisation of public services as a means of increasing efficiency. Davis' second book, Made in Britain: How the Nation Earns Its Living, was published by Little, Brown and Company in May 2011. His third book, "Post-Truth: Why We Have Reached Peak Bullshit and What We Can Do About It" is published by Little, Brown and Company in May 2017.

Personal life

Davis is a keen motorcyclist, and was seen riding a Yamaha R6 motorcycle in BBC Two's The City Uncovered. Davis lives with his partner Guillaume Baltz, a French landscape architect. Davis is the owner of a whippet named Mr. Whippy.

Honours and awards

Davis holds honorary degrees from the Open University, City University, Cardiff University, Coventry University and Aston University.

References

Evan Davis Wikipedia