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Mais Lecture
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Mais Lecture

The Mais Lecture has been hosted since 1978, on a mostly annual basis, by Bayes Business School (formerly Cass), part of City, University of London.[1]

The lecture is named in honour of Lord Mais, the 645th Lord Mayor of the City of London (1972–73), and Pro-Chancellor of City University (1979–84). He played a key role in establishing City University's Centre of Excellence for Banking and Finance, now part of the wider Bayes Faculty of Finance.

The lecture is regarded as a leading event for the banking and finance community of the City of London, having hosted a number of prestigious speakers including successive Prime Ministers, Chancellors of the Exchequer, and Governors of the Bank of England, and notably the forum in which successive Chancellors and Shadow Chancellors have set out their economic philosophy and policies.

In January 2021 Anneliese Dodds MP, Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer, became the first woman to give the Mais Lecture.

List of Mais Lectures

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Lecture Date Delivered by Title
First 9 Feb 1978 Gordon Richardson Reflections on the Conduct of Monetary Policy[2]
Second Nov 1979 Lionel Robbins Objectives of Monetary Policy: Past and Present
Third May 1981 Geoffrey Howe The Fight Against Inflation
Fourth Mar 1983 Friedrich Hayek Science and Ethics
Fifth 18 Jun 1984 Nigel Lawson The British Experiment[3][4][5]
Sixth May 1986 Roy Jenkins The International Finance Scene: Can Sense be Plucked Out of Danger
Seventh May 1987 Robin Leigh-Pemberton The Instruments of Monetary Policy
Eighth May 1988 Michel Camdessus The IMF in a Changing World
Ninth May 1989 Samuel Brittan A Restatement of Economic Liberalism
Tenth May 1990 Gordon Pepper Monetary Policy: A Post-Mortem and Proposal
Eleventh May 1992 Erik Hoffmeyer [da] Economic and Monetary Union: The Case for Central Bank Independence
Twelfth Jun 1993 Peter Lilley Benefits and Costs: Securing and Future of Social Security
Thirteenth May 1994 Kenneth Clarke The Changing World of Work in the 1990s
Fourteenth 22 May 1995 Tony Blair The Economic Framework for New Labour[6][5]
Fifteenth Oct 1996 Michael Heseltine Achieving Competitiveness in a Global Economy
Sixteenth 24 Jun 1997 Edward George Monetary Policy in Britain and Europe[7][8]
Seventeenth May 1998 Hans Tietmeyer Financial and Monetary Integration: Benefits, Opportunities, and Pitfalls
Eighteenth 19 Oct 1999 Gordon Brown The Conditions for Full Employment[9]
Nineteenth May 2000 Jonathan Sacks Markets, Governments, and Virtues
Twentieth May 2001 Valery Giscard d'Estaing The New European Debate: The Euro-zone and the Greater Europe
Twenty-first Apr 2003 Ernst Welteke Reflections on European Monetary Policy[10]
Twenty-second 12 May 2004 Otmar Issing The Euro: the First Five Years[11]
Twenty-third 17 May 2005 Mervyn King Monetary Policy: Practice Ahead of Theory[12][13][14]
Twenty-fourth 29 Oct 2008 Alistair Darling Chancellor Reveals His Plans to Maintain Economic Stability[15][16][17][18]
Twenty-fifth 13 May 2009 Axel A. Weber Reflections on the Financial Crisis[19]
Twenty-sixth 24 Feb 2010 George Osborne A New Economic Model[20][21][22][23][24][25][26]
Twenty-seventh 13 Jul 2011 Paul Volcker The World of Finance and the National Interest[27][28][29]
Twenty-eighth 8 May 2012 Patrick Honohan The Experience of Financial Integration – Ireland, Britain, Europe[30][31][32]
Twenty-ninth 18 Mar 2014 Mark Carney One Mission. One Bank. Promoting the Good of the People of the United Kingdom.[33][34][35]
Thirtieth 7 Oct 2015 Olivier Blanchard Rethinking Macro (Stabilisation) Policy[36][37][38]
Thirty-first 12 Jun 2017 Brian Griffiths Restoring Trust in the Banking System[39][40][41][42][43][44]
Thirty-second 29 Oct 2018 José Manuel Barroso The European Union and the Changing International Landscape[45][46]
Thirty-third 13 Jan 2021 Anneliese Dodds The challenges of the post-Covid, post-Brexit UK economy – a response [delivered virtually][47][48][49][50]
Thirty-fourth 24 Feb 2022 Rishi Sunak A new culture of enterprise[51][52][53]
Thirty-fifth 5 Jun 2023 Odile Renaud-Basso How to green the global economy[54][55][56]
Thirty-sixth 19 Mar 2024 Rachel Reeves Economic Growth in an Age of Insecurity[57][58][59][60][61]
Thirty-seventh 27 Mar 2025 Isabel Schnabel Financial literacy and monetary policy transmission[62][63][64][65]

See also

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References

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