Economics Conference - 27th June

Tuesday, May 06, 2008
by Geoff Riley

This event is selling out fast so I would encourage anyone intending to join us on the 27th June at the British Library to contact Sharon Curtis as possible to secure places - even if they are provisional at this stage.

There is one change to the published speaker schedule.  Unfortunately Jim O’Neill (Goldman Sachs) is unable to attend.  However, we are delighted that John Micklethwait, the Editor of The Economist, has agreed to step in.  John is a tremendous speaker, so the day still promises to be a highlight of our year.

Booking information for the conference can be found here:

Print Digg it Del.icio.us My Yahoo RSS

Comments

Name:

Email:

Location:

URL:

Smileys

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Submit the word you see below:


Latest entries

Categories

Monthly Archives

Tags

inflation, recession, confidence, competition, housing, price, prices, demand, slowdown, dollar, credit crunch, property, china, expectations, food, incentives, consumption, sterling, supply, euro, usa, unemployment, profit, environment, trade, gdp, risk, externalities, emissions, debt, mortgage, investment, globalisation, supermarkets, commodities, wealth, costs, economist, deflation, taxes, downturn, environmental, exports, inequality, productivity, economic cycle, employment, welfare, retailers, macroeconomics, saving, monopsony, evaluation, pollution, airlines, interest rates, happiness, waste, poverty, innovation, efficiency, manufacturing, management, competitiveness, oil, carbon trading, behavioural economics, economics, stocks, copper, tim harford, climate change, regulation, population, sub-prime, newsnight, survey, crude oil, india, rationality, landfill, uk economy, federal reserve, balance of payments, monetary policy, us economy, labour market, market failure, economies of scale, lse, aviation, opec, agflation, government failure, contestable, cpi, currencies, taxation, ben bernanke,

Syndicate