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Charles Goodhart

Charles Goodhart was appointed to the Norman Sosnow Chair of Banking and Finance at the London School of Economics (LSE) in 1985, until his retirement in 2002 when he became Emeritus Professor of Banking and Finance. He was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 1990 and awarded the CBE in 1997 for services to monetary economics.

During 1986, he helped to found the Financial Markets Group at LSE. For the previous 17 years he served as a monetary economist at the Bank of England, becoming a Chief Advisor in 1980. Following his advice on overcoming the financial crisis in Hong Kong in 1983, he subsequently served on the HK Exchange Fund Advisory Committee until 1997.

Later in 1997 he was appointed for three years, until May 2000, one of the four independent outside members of the newly-formed Bank of England Monetary Policy Committee.

He became an economic consultant to Morgan Stanley in 2009, until he resigned, at the age of 80, in 2016. It was during this period that he began work on the subject matter of his most recent book, The Great Demographic Reversal: Ageing Societies. Waning Inequality, and an Infaltion Revival (Pal grave Macmillan, 2020), with his colleague there, Manoj Pradhan. He has written widely on matters relating to monetary policy, especially central banking, and macro-economics. Charles is the author of Goodhart’s Law “that any observed statistical regularity will tend to collapse once pressure is placed upon it for control purposes”.

Among his earlier publications are The Evolution of Central Banks, The MIT Press (1988) and The Central Bank and The Financial System, Palgrave Macmillan (1995).

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Referate:

«Inflation: The relative role of demographics and central banks» (20.04.2023)