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Patrick Minford

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British macroeconomist (born 1943)

Patrick Minford
Patrick Minford at MSc dinner for economics students atCardiff University in February 2008
Born (1943-05-17)17 May 1943 (age 82)
Spouse
Rosemary Allcorn
(m. 1970)
Academic background
Alma mater
Academic work
School or traditionNew classical macroeconomics
Institutions

Anthony Patrick Leslie MinfordCBE (born 17 May 1943) is a British macroeconomist who is professor of applied economics at Cardiff Business School,Cardiff University, a position he has held since 1997. He wasEdward Gonner Professor of Applied Economics at theUniversity of Liverpool from 1976 to 1997. In 2016, Minford was a notable member of theEconomists for Brexit group which, in opposition to the consensus view of economists,[1] advocated the UK leaving theEuropean Union and claimed large economic benefits.

Early career

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Born inShrewsbury, Minford was educated atHorris Hill School,Winchester College,Balliol College, Oxford (BA), and theLondon School of Economics (MSc; PhD).[2] He is the elder brother ofJohn Minford, who is an academic and translator of Classical Chinese. He worked at theMinistry of Overseas Development and then as an economic adviser to the Ministry of Finance ofMalawi. He then took a position as an economic adviser toHM Treasury's External Division.[3] He was appointed as economics fellow atManchester University in 1974, becoming editor at theNational Institute of Economic and Social Research in 1975, where he began to build the so-called Liverpool Model with Kent Matthews.

Academic research

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Minford and his research team at the University of Liverpool created the Liverpool Model, the first operationalrational expectations model of any economy.[4][5][6][7] This work was concurrent with the early efforts of Fair and Anderson[8] to simulate large nonlinear rational expectations models; it was the first to apply theextended path algorithm (see Fair and Taylor)[9] to a full macro model estimated under rational expectations; and was at the forefront of what came to be known as the 'rational expectations revolution'. At this timeadaptive expectations was the dominant model of expectations formation and rational expectations was greeted with incredulity.[10] Other work focused on the exchange rate, carrying out model simulations to evaluate the role of floating versus various fixed rate proposals.[11]

More recently, work by Minford and co-authors at Cardiff has focused on indirect inference methods and numerous applied studies ofdynamic stochastic general equilibrium (DSGE) models. These examine modern controversies including bank regulation, quantitative easing, and monetary policy more generally.[12][13] Recent monetary policy proposals suggested by this research are the introduction ofprice level targeting andnominal GDP targeting.[14]

Policy impact

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Minford gained prominence in 1981 when 364 leading economists published a statement criticisingMargaret Thatcher's economic policies; Minford replied by defending the Government inThe Times. Thatcher subsequently wrote a letter to Minford to congratulate him. Minford was a supporter of the theories ofMilton Friedman, a prominent member of theMont Pelerin Society (MPS) founded in 1947 by a group of 36 scholars meeting in Mont Pelerin, Switzerland.[citation needed]

Rational expectations work at Liverpool was used to help craft 1980s Conservative Government policies on inflation (UK monetarism and its link with fiscal policy).[15][16] Work by Minford's team at Liverpool was also influential on unemployment policy, especially labour market liberalisation, where the Liverpool Model was the first model to develop a 'supply side' designed to explain the underlying trend or 'natural' unemployment rate.[17][18] Minford said in November 2015 that running simulations of leaving that EU that "the first thing that comes out is an 8% drop in the cost of living on day one."[19][better source needed] Although this did not occur, Minford blamed the volatility in the economy since Brexit for making it difficult to find the impact.[20]

Work by Minford’s Liverpool team on exchange rates was influential in the 1990s Exchange Rate Mechanism debate and the 2000s debate over joining the euro.[21][22] Minford was againstNigel Lawson's policy ofpound sterling shadowing theDeutschmark. He was also against Britain joining the EuropeanExchange Rate Mechanism because he thought it was having a bad effect on recovering fromrecession and keeping downinterest rates.[23]

A confirmedeurosceptic, he is a supporter of theBetter Off Out campaign to leave theEuropean Union because he believes that the net economic costs to Britain of its policies are substantial. He argues that they are in most respects contrary to free market principles and that British citizens had no power to alter them.[24] In 2016, Minford was a notable member of theEconomists for Brexit group which supported the referendum campaign for the UK to leave the European Union.[25] He believes that Brexit could increase GDP by 6.8%,[26][27] and could reduce prices for British consumers.[28]

Minford favoured theCommunity Charge or poll tax as a way of keeping down local government spending to levels chosen by local citizens.[29] In 1988 he was appointed a board member of theMerseyside Development Corporation but resigned, saying it had a negative effect on job creation. He is on the advisory council ofReform.[30]

In the media

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Minford was interviewed about the rise ofThatcherism for the 2006BBC TV documentary seriesTory! Tory! Tory! Minford was also a guest at thefuneral of Margaret Thatcher in 2013.[31]

Honours

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Minford was appointedCommander of the Order of the British Empire in the1996 New Year Honours for services to economics.[32]

Publications

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  • Patrick Minford,Substitution Effects, Speculation and Exchange Rate Stability (1978).
  • Patrick Minford,Unemployment: Cause and Cure (1983).
  • Patrick Minford,Why there is no alternative (to Conservative economic theory), inRight Ahead newspaper published by theConservative Monday Club, October 1985 Conservative Party Conference Issue.
  • Patrick Minford,Economic Strategy, a Policy Paper for the Monday Club's Economics Policy Committee, September 1986.
  • Patrick Minford,The Housing Morass (1987).
  • Patrick Minford,Why we need bold tax cuts on 14 March, Policy Paper for the Monday Club's Economic Policy Committee, March 1989.
  • Patrick Minford,Conservative Economic Strategies into the 90s, inRight Ahead newspaper published by the Conservative Monday Club, October 1989 Conservative Party Conference Issue.
  • Patrick Minford,The Supply Side Revolution in Britain (1991).
  • Patrick Minford,Markets Not Stakes (1998).
  • Patrick Minford,Should Britain join the Euro? The Chancellor's Five Euro Tests (2002).
  • Patrick Minford,Should Britain leave the EU? An Economic Analysis of a Troubled Relationship (2005).

References

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  1. ^"The Economists for Brexit predictions are inconsistent with the basic facts of international trade".Lse Brexit. 23 August 2017.
  2. ^'Minford, Prof. (Anthony) Patrick (Leslie)', Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 2017
  3. ^"Patrick Minford – Curriculum Vitae". Archived from the original on 26 November 2009. Retrieved14 July 2010.
  4. ^P. Minford and K. Matthews "A Rational Expectations Model of the UK under Floating Exchange Rates",European Economic Review, 1980, pp. 189–219
  5. ^P. Minford, "A Rational Expectations Model of the UK Under Fixed and Floating Exchange Rates", inThe State of Macroeconomics, (eds. K. Brunner and A. Meltzer), Carnegie-Rochester Series on Public Policy, 1980, Vol. 12. (Now part ofJournal of Monetary Economics).
  6. ^See also P. Minford and K. Matthews, 1978, "A Note on Terminal Conditions and the Analytic Solution of RE Models", Department of Economics, University of Liverpool.
  7. ^"A Note on Terminal Conditions and the Analytic Solutions of RE Models".
  8. ^R. Fair, "An analysis of a macroeconometric model with rational expectations in the bond and stock markets",American Economic Review, 69(4), 1979, 539–552.; Paul A. Anderson, "Rational expectations forecasts from nonrational models",Journal of Monetary Economics, 5, 1979, 67–80.
  9. ^R. Fair and J. Taylor, "Solution and Maximum Likelihood Estimation of Dynamic Nonlinear Rational Expectations Models"Econometrica, 1983, 51, (4), 1169–85
  10. ^P. Minford "The Nature and Purpose of UK Macroeconomic Models",Three Banks Review, March 1980, pp. 3–26
  11. ^P. Minford "The Exchange Rate and Monetary Policy",Oxford Economic Papers, Vol. 33, July 1981 Supplement, pp. 120–42, reprinted inThe Money Supply and the Exchange Rate, (eds. W. Eltis and P. Sinclair), Oxford University Press, 1981, pp. 120–42
  12. ^P. Minford, Vo Phuong Mai Le, David Meenagh, and Michael Wickens "How much nominal rigidity is there in the US economy? Testing a New Keynesian DSGE Model using indirect inference",Journal of Economic Dynamics and Control, 35(12), 2078–2104, December 2011; special issueFrontiers in Structural Macroeconomic Modelling.
  13. ^P.Minford, Mai Le, David Meenagh, Mike Wickens and Yongdeng Xu Testing macro models by indirect inference: a survey for users, forthcoming Open Economies Review; accompanied by a suite of programmes on www.patrickminford.net/Indirect, enabling applied economists to use these methods.
  14. ^Vo Phuong Mai Le, David Meenagh and A. Patrick Minford, "Monetarism rides again? US monetary policy in a world of Quantitative Easing", No E2014/22,Cardiff Economics Working Papers from Cardiff University, Cardiff Business School, Economics Section
  15. ^P. Minford. Evidence given to Treasury and Civil Service Committee, Memorandum, in Memoranda on Monetary Policy, HMSO 1980, Oral Evidence given in July 1980 in Committee's Third Report, Vol. II (Minutes of Evidence, HMSO, pp. 8–40)
  16. ^P. Minford 'Monetarism, Inflation and Economic Policy', in Is Monetarism Enough ? (ed. A. Seldon), Institute of Economic Affairs, 1980, pp. 1–31.
  17. ^P. Minford 'Labour Market Equilibrium in an Open Economy', Oxford Economic Papers, November 1983 Supplement on Unemployment, Vol. 35(4), reprinted in The Causes of Unemployment, (eds. C. A. Greenhalgh, P. R. G. Layard and A. J. Oswald), Oxford University Press, 1983, pp. 207–44.
  18. ^P. Minford with D.H. Davies, M.J. Peel and A. Sprague Unemployment: Cause and Cure. Martin Robertson, Oxford, 1983. 2nd Edition (with above and P. Ashton), Basil Blackwell, Oxford, 1985
  19. ^Dawar, Anil (10 November 2015)."Why we must quit the EU: Cost of living would FALL by 8%".Express.co.uk. Retrieved20 November 2023.
  20. ^"Where Britain went wrong".POLITICO. 3 November 2022. Retrieved20 November 2023.
  21. ^P. Minford, David Meenagh and Bruce Webb ‘Britain and EMU: Assessing the costs in macroeconomic variability’, The World Economy27(3), 2004, 301–358; also available on the Blackwell Synergy online delivery service, accessible via the journal's website at [https://web.archive.org/web/19990125093717/http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/ Blackwell-Synergy]
  22. ^P. Minford ‘Should we join the Euro? The Chancellor’s 5 tests examined’ IEA Occasional Paper 126, 2002.
  23. ^P. Minford 'The EMS – what is wrong with it ?', in The International Monetary System and Economic Development, (eds. C. Drager and L. Spath), Drager Foundation, 1988.
  24. ^P. Minford with Vidya Mahambare and Eric Nowell, Should Britain leave the EU? An economic analysis of a troubled relationship, Edward Elgar in association with the Institute of Economic Affairs, 2005, p. 254; second edition, same title, December 2015, P. Minford with Sakshi Gupta, Vo P. M. Le, Vidya Mahambare and Yongdeng Xu.
  25. ^"'Economists for Brexit' back campaign to leave EU".BBC News. 28 April 2016. Retrieved13 September 2018.
  26. ^"Most economists say Brexit will hurt the economy—but one disagrees".The Economist. 24 August 2017.
  27. ^"The only economic study showing Brexit will benefit UK has been debunked as 'doubly misleading'".The Independent. 22 April 2017.
  28. ^"Boris Johnson says May's Brexit plan 'worse than status quo'".BBC News. 11 September 2018. Retrieved13 September 2018.
  29. ^P. Minford 'How Fair is the Community Charge or Poll Tax ?', Economic Affairs, Vol. 10 No. 5, June/July 1990, pp. 45–46, IEA.
  30. ^Reform,Advisory CouncilArchived 26 July 2011 at theWayback Machine. Retrieved 15 May 2011
  31. ^"Final Guest List"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 12 June 2018.
  32. ^"No. 54255".The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 December 1995. p. 9.

External links

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