Edmund Conway



Profile:
Full name: Edmund Conway

Area of interest: Economics

Journals/Organisation: The Times

Email: [mailto:ed@edmundconway.com ed@edmundconway.com]

Personal website: http://www.edmundconway.com

Website: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/comment/edmundconway

Blog: http://blogs.telegraph.co.uk/edmund_conway

Representation:

Networks: https://twitter.com/EdConwaySky



Biography:
About: Economics Editor of Sky News, columnist at The Times

Education: Pembroke College, Oxford: English

Career: Joined the Daily Telegraph in 2002 as a graduate trainee, reporting on domestic and foreign news, business news and writing literary and culture pieces. Then joined the Daily Mail as its first economics correspondent, rejoining The Telegraph in 2006 as Economics Editor. Became Sky News' first Economics Editor in 2011

Current position/role: formely the Economics Editor at The Telegraph and is currently at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, see 2010–2011 Scholarship Recipients


 * also writes/written for: written for a variety of other publications, including The New Statesman and The House magazine

Other roles/Main role:

Other activities:

Disclosures:

Viewpoints/Insight:

Broadcast media: Frequent television and radio appearances on the BBC, CNN, CNBC and other outlets

Video:

Controversy/Criticism:

Awards/Honours: Telegraph's Economics Editor wins award - Edmund Conway, The Daily Telegraph's Economics Editor was named Reporter of the Year at the 23rd Workworld Media Awards on Tuesday - 20th January 2010

Scoops:

Other:



Books & Debate:


Latest work: 50 Economics Ideas (you really need to know) - a guide to understanding economics for everyone

Speaking/Appearances:

Debate: 

Journals:

 * No regular column



Articles: 2016

 * Hold your nose for the truth about Versailles - The overpowering stench at Louis XIV’s dazzling palace was an early sign of how corruption undermines dictators - 27th May
 * Why the EU is keeping quiet about Greek debt - The eurozone should stop pussyfooting around and accept the country will never pay back its creditors - 20th May
 * In or out of the EU, the economy’s in a mess - With high debt and low productivity, our problems go far deeper than referendum uncertainty - 13th May
 * By staying in the EU we can help to dismantle it - Amid the scare stories put about by both sides, there may be one good reason for voting Remain - 22nd April
 * Outlooks don’t look more depressing than this - What little money there is has gone to the rich not the poor. No wonder there’s a rise in extremist politics - 15th April
 * Britain’s to blame for the tax haven monster - Thanks to our overseas territories, London is the capital of a sordid money merry-go-round - 7th April
 * Steelworkers are paying the price of China’s blunders - The crisis at Port Talbot is not about rustbelt industries but the massive distortion of Beijing on the world economy - 1st April
 * Bursting the housing bubble is good for us all - Soaring property prices have made homes unaffordable and distorted the economy for too long - 25th March
 * Osborne the great tinkerer isn’t a real Tory - Cutting the amount of tax taken by the state doesn’t come naturally to the tactical chancellor - 18th March
 * Screeching U-turns never hurt this chancellor - Whether on pensions, council tax or welfare caps, Osborne’s policy reversals are usually wise - 8th March
 * Trump & Co are bad for the world economy - If we are to avoid another global recession we must make friends of other nations, not enemies - 1st March
 * Britain could flourish outside the EU - but at what cost? - There would be months of volatility but a constructive divorce could open up Britain to the world - 24th February
 * Banks have swapped one addiction for another - We may believe our money is safer, but another crisis could expose our fragile defences - 16th February
 * Let’s be positive about negative interest rates - It may fly in the face of conventional economic wisdom but going sub-zero can make sense - 2nd February
 * China is trapped in the ultimate trilemma - Lesson 1 for Beijing: no nation can control interest rates, currency value and have free flow of capital - 19th January
 * Deep-freeze Britain faces its own Lost Decade - Japan is the world’s cautionary economic tale. In many ways, we’re in even bigger trouble - 12th January
 * Put your money on ‘experts’ getting it wrong - Generations of forecasters have been woefully inaccurate. So why do we pay attention to them? - 5th January



Articles: 2015

 * Why ownership is no longer such a big deal - Ten years ago we tended to have our own houses, cars, music and videos. These days possession is not what it used to be - 29th December
 * Republican mavericks have a lot to teach us - White House hopefuls may be wrong-headed but at least they’re debating the big economic issues. We should too - 17th November
 * How I learnt to stop worrying and love the paywall - Columnists like open access, but the trend towards ad-blockers is making the internet a precarious place for businesses - 10th November
 * A plummeting pound is just what we need - Alarm bells are ringing in the engine room of the British economy. A weaker currency could help us avoid a disaster - 3rd November
 * Has Osborne given up his economic dream? - The chancellor came to office determined to tackle household debt and woeful productivity but has failed in both - 27th October
 * We’re going to regret our reliance on China - Osborne’s straitjacket on borrowing leaves us courting a nation with a flagging economy and a record of industrial espionage - 20th October
 * Why the arts put Britain on the world stage - Our creative industries may not generate the billions that banking does. But the ‘soft power’ they give us is immense - 13th October
 * Leaking economy could cost Britain dear - The amount of income generated in the UK which ends up abroad is at an all-time high. If only we knew how to stop it - 6th October
 * The living wage is just a shot in the dark - Osborne’s plan is widely backed and hasn’t spooked business, but it’s not the answer to low productivity or the wealth gap - 22nd September
 * Good, the bad and the ugly of Corbynomics - Labour’s new economic strategy may look bonkers but if the recovery is blown off course, it could come in quite handy - 15th September
 * China can’t just be a glorified assembly line - The world’s largest economy needs to kick its addiction to debt-fuelled investment and make smarter products - 8th September
 * The smart money’s on Isis destroying itself - Currency is destiny – and the world’s most barbaric regime is heading for disaster by adopting the gold standard - 18th August
 * Now’s the time for borrowing and spending - With the interest rate on government bonds set to stay low for two decades, the chancellor should seize the moment - 11th August
 * Borrowers, get ready for interest rate pain - The era of unprecedentedly cheap money is coming to an end. How hard will the Bank of England apply the brakes? - 4th August
 * Your instincts are wrong – the news is good - Our misconceptions about household debt and the north-south divide actually make the chancellor’s hand stronger - 28th July
 * Lesson 1: you can’t hold back economic tides - Policymakers across the world suffer from the delusion that they can control finances by predicting what will happen - 21st July
 * The euro-exit genie is now out of the bottle - The deal to keep Greece in the eurozone is so flawed that it’s only a matter of time before a member state is forced out - 14th July
 * Greece’s Che Guevara crashed the economy - Ousted finance minister Yanis Varoufakis was hailed a hero for defying Europe but has impoverished his fellow citizens - 7th July
 * The dream of closer union is melting away - The euro’s founders believed it would supplant the dollar as a reserve currency and knit Europe together. It has failed at both - 30th June
 * The IMF gambled on Greece and has lost - Optimism at the euro’s launch has turned into backbiting and betrayal. No wonder Christine Lagarde is panicking - 23rd June
 * Don’t listen to the anti-trade scaremongers - Campaigners warn that trade deals will mean selling off the health service. In reality, they will bring prosperity for all - 16th June
 * Cash-strapped Greece is on a road to nowhere - Hospital budgets cut by 94 per cent and firefighters begging in the street – this is what a nation on the brink looks like - 9th June
 * Give Greece a golden parachute to leave the euro - An amicable separation from Athens, rather than a messy split, could be the making of the single currency - 2nd June
 * Is our latest financial bubble about to go pop? - The price of shares, art and property is sky high but there’s little sign of the economic recovery needed to prevent a crash - 19th May
 * Will the real Cameron please stand up? - While in coalition the prime minister could conceal his true character. Now, though, he’ll be forced to show his hand - 13th May
 * That’s enough choice – what we need is honesty - Like rival supermarket chains, the main parties are bombarding us with offers that obscure the gulf between them - 5th May
 * Rent controls won’t end our property madness - Attempts by Labour to regulate the housing market could lead to tenants paying more for homes, not less - 28th April
 * Minority government could be good for us all - Ignore the prophets of doom — you don’t need majority party rule to have a flourishing economy and better politics - 14th April
 * It’s obviously not the economy at all, stupid - The one factor that is supposed to play the biggest part in elections has had virtually no impact in polling so far - 7th April
 * We don’t need cash. Let’s abolish it outright - Facing negative interest rates, people are stockpiling money in warehouses. Better that we take a more radical approach - 24th March
 * The chancellor of piddling, pint-size policies - George Osborne has steered the economy well, but his torrent of trifling measures outdoes even Gordon Brown - 17th March
 * What if we had to take the Greek medicine? - The troika prescribing Greece a bitter economic cure might have some radical treatments for Britain’s public finances - 24th February
 * No solution in sight to this toxic Greek crisis - Syriza’s position keeps changing, while Germany and others will not countenance paying off the Mount Olympus of debt - 17th February
 * Wanted: a target the Bank can actually hit - Inflation targeting has guided economic policy for decades but when it fails to prevent disasters, it’s time to change - 10th February
 * Wanted: an internet revolution for estate agents - Buying and selling homes is becoming Britain’s biggest business. It desperately needs a 21st-century transformation - 3rd February
 * Basle’s secretive bankers have all the power - As economists and celebrities flock to Davos, the place where real decisions are made prefers to shun the limelight - 20th January
 * Two years on, a Greek exit is even likelier - Greece’s leftwingers and many eurocrats think there could be benefits if Athens quit the euro. Both are wrong - 6th January



Articles: 2014

 * Economists needn’t be Christmas Scrooges - With tinsel and carols should come an appreciation of the importance of wellbeing and honesty about mistakes - 23rd December
 * The UK is paying the price of its jobs miracle - The recession brought less unemployment than feared but the chancellor is feeling the cost in lower tax receipts - 14th October
 * Enjoy the football, but don’t expect City forecasters to pick a winner - 11th June
 * A City boom will bring gloom for exporters - If British manufacturing is ever to recover we need an even weaker pound, not one buoyed up by banking’s resurgence - 1st May
 * Is George Osborne really a Conservative at all? - The Chancellor is no high priest of austerity. Other countries are cutting more than Britain - 18th March



Articles: 2013

 * Osborne’s magical summer has bewitched us - In generating a feel-good boom, the Chancellor has neglected long-lasting reforms - 7th October



The Daily Telegraph:
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Remit/Info: British and global economic issues

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Website: Telegraph.co Finance / Comment / Edmund Conway

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Day published: varies

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 * previously, major contributor to the Word-on-the-street property column (archive)



Articles: 2014

 * Americans have a Briton to thank for the dollar’s power - A Cambridge professor made economic history when he suggested using the US dollar as the global reserve currency - 13th July
 * Armed with slide rules, they saved the world - As Allied troops fought in Normandy, a group of economists faced a very different challenge - 5th June



Articles: 2012

 * Prosperity across the South is hiding a recession in much of Britain - If you're one of those people who still doubts that there ever was a double-dip recession, there's a good chance you're right - 2nd December
 * Any takers for the toughest job in Britain? - With the country in the middle of its biggest financial crisis, Ed Conway looks at who is likely to replace Sir Mervyn King as Governor of the Bank of England. - 16th April



Articles: 2011
Selected articles:
 * Eurozone leaders' comedy of errors brings monetary union to the brink - ‘I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by,” said Douglas Adams - 25th September
 * Sir John Vickers' banking report: bankers pay too low a price for high risks - The Vickers reforms won’t go far enough – limited liability should be abolished for banks - 12th September
 * may look as grim as the years after 1945 but there are glimmers of hope'' - With markets in free fall, there are lessons to learn from how Britain recovered following the Second World War - 21st August
 * the gold standard was a fatal error we're now all paying for'' - Roll out the bunting. Tomorrow is the 40th anniversary of the modern global economy - 14th August
 * debt crisis: Europe's politicians will be punished for a deal dripping with moral hazard'' - This was the agreement Europe should have come up with 18 months ago, but it is also deeply flawed - 24th July
 * political system isn’t quirky, it’s dangerous'' - The US economy is close to default, yet the parties are still playing silly games - 14th July
 * Germany must exit the euro'' - Germany - not Greece - has 'destabilised the euro area and is one of the biggest road-blocks to its ultimate recovery - 18th June
 * Greek bail-out: what’s going on?'' - country needs another huge bail-out. The impact on the euro and Britain could be enormous - 17th June



Articles: 2010

 * the Tea Party is brewing up trouble for the world’s currencies'' - When, decades in the future, historians write the definitive account of the great economic crisis of the early 21st century, the chances are they won’t waste too much ink on the G20 summit that just concluded in Seoul. Or will they? - 14th November
 * Tony Blair, then Gordon Brown. What has poor old Harvard done to deserve this?'' - Edmund Conway reports from Cambridge, Massachusetts, on a haunting visit from his past - 18th September
 * Bank must reassure Britain it has not lost its grip on policy'' - What would you guess is the world's most highly-geared financial institution? - 15th August
 * recovery mission encounters hitch as harness slips off Chinese dragon'' - One of the stories Mervyn King likes to tell is of the moment it dawned on him that recovery from what he calls the Great Recession would be almost as difficult as dealing with the crisis itself - 8th August
 * class families face a triple whammy'' - Falling pensions, cuts and the banking crisis will impoverish many families - 1st July
 * 2010: Will Britain be a world-beater or an economic also-ran?'' - George Osborne has a unique opportunity to make the economy a global contender again - 17th June
 * Cameron can't afford to be caught napping in Brussels'' - David Cameron will have to be on his guard at his first European summit - 10th June
 * spending cuts: a little more nasty talk may yet be in order'' - We Britons love it when our government talks nasty to us. If you don't believe me, consult the history books - 9th June
 * gamblers betting on Britain going bust'' - Hedge funds are wagering billions on the UK defaulting - 5th June
 * gains tax: tories tried to pluck the goose, but ended up with a turkey'' - Lifting the rate so sharply overnight could do more harm than good for both families and businesses - 28th May
 * Europe heading for a meltdown?'' - This financial crisis is worse than the sub-prime crash of 2008 because the sums are so much bigger and it is governments that are in dire straits - 27th May
 * the drama in Europe lies a global crisis'' - The euro is under threat – along with our entire free-market system - 20th May
 * Election 2010: We don't have to go up in flames like Greece'' - five suggestions for the incoming Chancellor - 6th May (General Election 2010)
 * to Ashes'' - The Greek horror story should scare us all, says Edmund Conway. Its problems are not unique - 29th April
 * Election 2010: tell us where the axe will fall'' - You don’t have to look too far these days for vivid examples of what happens when you really lose control of your public finances- 29th April
 * Election 2010: What the would-be chancellors haven't said'' - You can't have a prosperous economy in which an overindebted government is twinned with an overindebted private sector - 22nd April
 * debt: the horror story has only one ending'' - Solving the crisis in Greece will involve an enormous amount of pain, which Britain will share- 15th April
 * financial proposals do not go far enough'' - The Tories are so terrified of throwing out the status quo that they will not attempt the fiscal reform that is drastically needed - 8th April
 * bankers of their responsibilities would be better than regulation'' - One of the ways in which banks have been tightening their lending conditions on small businesses is to refuse to lend out cash unless the directors make themselves jointly and severally liable for the loans - 2nd April
 * banks need far more taxing treatment'' - We have a once in a lifetime opportunity to restore the financial system to health - 1st April
 * 2010: City's verdict was swift and damning'' - The economists will be poring over this Budget for weeks, but it took all of two minutes for the markets to make up their minds - 25th March
 * about a Budget with a bit of honesty?'' - This is what the Chancellor should say in his Budget speech next week - 18th March
 * have to learn from Japan's lost years'' - The turbulence in the currency markets is a welcome warning sign - 4th March
 * must arm ourselves for a class war'' - The recession has increased the wealth gap to dangerous levels, and George Osborne does not seem serious about tackling it - 25th February
 * panic about inflation - that can wait'' - Recessionary forces are still the biggest problem facing Britain -18th February
 * aging population is a bigger economic threat than the financial crisis'' - Just when you thought it was safe to come out into the open. As if it weren't enough that the euro is crumbling, that the banking sector is still vulnerable; that Britain is steeling itself for its biggest spending squeeze in living memory, along comes Barclays Capital with some really bad news - 12th February
 * could bring euroland to its knees'' - The architects of economic union failed to recognise its Achilles' heel - 11th February
 * but for the grace of God goes Britain'' - Should markets pass the same verdict on Britain as on Greece, the results would be almost identical - and just as disastrous - 4th February
 * year James Cameron helped Davos learn to laugh at itself'' - This was the year, to judge by reaction to the Avatar film director's presentation, when Davos learnt to laugh at itself - 30th January (Davos)
 * 2010: How to buy friends and influence people'' - Lavish spending on lobbying is behind the banks' successful fight against reform - 28th January
 * of England independence is a cause of immense frustration for Gordon Brown'' - Mervyn King's latest criticism of the handling of the recession was a body blow to the PM - 21st January
 * a jubilee be the answer to our prayers?'' - Wiping the fiscal slate clean is a tempting but self-defeating option - 14th January
 * reality lies buried beneath a stream of meaningless pre-election statistics'' - And so it begins. Were anyone in doubt that the next election will be fought on an economic battleground, against a shifting background of baffling and contradictory statistics, they have not had to wait for long for the rude awakening - 6th January
 * 2010 sovereign debt crisis could still cause UK banking chaos'' - Last year was one of the easiest for economic predictions. In the wake of Lehman's collapse, and the semi-nationalisation of the world's banking system, at least a few things seemed obvious - 4th January



Articles: 2009

 * 'experts' who stopped making sense'' - Why, despite the financial crisis, do we still put our faith in economists - 31st December
 * dreaming of a cashless Christmas'' - we should have nothing to fear about giving up those grubby notes and coins - 24th December
 * only one escape from our debt trap'' - Britain's historic strategy of letting inflation rip will simply not work - 17th December
 * report: After Brown's Fantasy Budget of 2007 it's time for Britain's hairshirt'' - If you were after proof of how wrong Gordon Brown and the Treasury got the economy, you could hardly do better than digging out Budget 2007 - 9th December
 * deal at the Doha Round that really could save the world'' - The focus on climate change has driven attention away from a far more vital issue - 4th December
 * deal on trade that really could save the world'' - The focus on climate change has driven attention away from a far more vital issue - 3rd December
 * news - Britain still makes things'' - Our much-mocked manufacturing sector is stronger than we think - 26th November
 * economic miracle is a fragile one'' - the country's leaders risk creating the same type of asset bubble that floored Japan - 12th November
 * black gold is dragging us into the red'' - Oil wealth was the secret saviour of the economy, but no longer - 5th November
 * social timebomb is set to explode in Britain'' - The true jobless total is already over five million – and the young are hardest hit - 29th October
 * is changing but we don't have a map'' - Even Mervyn King admits we have yet to work out how we will run our economy in the future - 22nd October
 * return of the bonus bonanza for bankers'' - A year ago, the financial system was in meltdown and bankers were the villains of the piece. So how can it be that Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan now have billions to pay out in salaries and bonuses? - 16th October
 * bad will spending cuts get? Take a look at Latvia'' - Britain will not escape the savage spending cuts seen elsewhere in Europe - 15th October
 * can still be a power in a changing world'' - This country's international influence must survive our decline as an economic power - 9th October
 * inconvenient truth: financial crises are inevitable'' - The IMF's new early warning system is doomed to disappoint - 1st October
 * are entering a new age of protectionism'' - The 21st-century form of protectionism is no less deadly than its 1930s predecessor - just less visible - 24th September
 * remains the Bank's secret weapon in times of turmoil'' - It is déjà vu all over again. The pound has fallen by 5pc since the start of August, and despite a slight recovery, currency analysts are predicting that it will soon hit parity against the euro - 23rd September
 * Osborne’s secret weapon to cut the deficit'' - The shadow chancellor can succeed where others failed - 9th September
 * case for borrowing is born out of the Great Depression'' - At the core of Keynesian economics is the idea that fiscal policy (government taxing and spending) should be used as a tool to control an economy - 3rd September
 * and bust capitalism won't be fixed'' - Finance ministers are now simply papering over cracks having squandered the opportunity to make real changes to the way the world economy works - 3rd September
 * easing beginning to show in M4'' - The Bank of England has produced the first apparent statistical evidence that its programme of quantitative easing may now be successfully boosting the amount of money flowing around the economy - 1st September
 * inflation opinions are failing'' - If it is a misfortune to get one forecast wrong, and carelessness to mess up two, what word does one use when someone gets a staggering 12 wrong? - 19th August
 * to save the economy and make a fortune – set up a bank'' - Smashing open the system should be a priority for Whitehall and the City - 19th August
 * King tells a puzzled City: 'It's the levels stupid''' - If there's one thing that really infuriates the City, it is Mervyn King's attitude when it transpires that the Bank of England has wrongfooted the markets - 15th August
 * empty crisp bag that shows how Britain is beating recession'' - Isaac Newton's epiphany came courtesy of an apple; mine was down to an empty packet of crisps - 13th August
 * Beware - our sins may return to haunt us - Don't be duped into believing this credit crunch is over - 6th August
 * after the next election will be key'' - For those who assumed that the ratings agencies never really knew what they were talking about, yesterday was something of a field day - 1st August
 * crisis, and a crisis for economics'' - The financial meltdown has forced 'the dismal science' of economics to go back to basics - 30th July
 * UK economy is still too sick to throw away its QE prescription'' - Officially the Bank of England's quantitative easing programme still has at least another week and a bit to run, although to judge from the behaviour of the gilt markets and the comments of economists, you'd be forgiven for thinking the bold move is all but over - 29th July
 * recession for the many, not the few'' - Despite the worry over middle-class job losses, it is the poorest who are suffering most - 23rd July
 * thinking needed on debt'' - Debt WILL be our legacy. Much of it that caused the credit crisis has yet to be written off and a lot of it is underwritten by taxpayers, be it bank or government liabilities - 14th July
 * recovery comes, it won't feel like one'' - The end of the recession will merely be the start of a long, painful journey - 9th July
 * tax revenues are about to balloon our budget deficit'' - Shadow-boxing between Gordon Brown and David Cameron skirts over the big issue - 2nd July
 * Englishman doesn't have to own his castle'' - The house-price bubble should have taught us a lesson - 25th June
 * truths in the banqueting hall'' - The banks aren't being fixed – and Mervyn King knows who's to blame - 19th June
 * recession may be over but the pain has just begun'' - Debt – public and private – could still be our undoing - 11th June
 * still waiting for a banking shake-up'' - So far, the punishment meted out to the banking sector does not fit the crime - 4th June
 * crisis is an opportunity – this time it's the chance to spend less'' - Since the earliest days of civilisation humanity has been fascinated with the notion that out of trauma, disaster and hardship, great things can come - 29th May
 * crisis: Only a new Bretton Woods will solve it'' - Trying to save the world economy with new regulations and codes of practice is like trying to cure a cancer patient with plastic surgery - 29th May
 * crisis: We must mend our ways, not make more rules'' - We are all ultimately to blame for economic crises - 28th May
 * strangely serene despite our worrying similarities to Zimbabwe'' - To the casual observer this hardly seems the most relaxing time to be Governor of the Bank of England - 14th May
 * take a ride on the cash carousel'' - Bankers are making millions from the latest financial policy - 14th May
 * we pay for pensions without working until we drop?'' - The ticking of the pensions timebomb is deafening. Could radical reform of the welfare system and a rising birth rate spare us - 7th May
 * sector pensions must be tackled for the sake of the economy'' - It is hard not to feel for Alistair Darling. He is faced with the most insurmountable task since Tony Blair asked the intelligence services whether they could possibly lay their hands on some Iraqi WMD - 30th April
 * Obama can't trust to luck to fix the economy'' - Barack Obama needs to be much more decisive if he is going to extricate America from the vicious circle of this financial crisis - 30th April
 * pregnancy may be the answer to our mountain of debt'' - If you were looking for scary economic charts you could hardly do worse than dig out the one showing Britain’s national debt going back to the 19th century - 25th April
 * 2009: It was the day Labour hoisted the red flag'' - The markets were appalled at Alistair Darling's borrowing plans - they will charge Britain a lot more for our debt - 23rd April
 * not forget that even the Great Depression had green shoots'' - We will repeat the 1930s if we stop the stimulus too soon - 9th April
 * President Obama managed to unlock the G20 Summit'' - The US president's can-do spirit helped to transform the G20 meeting from a weary round of re-announced initiatives into the beginnings of a dynamic response - 6th April
 * Summit: an easy guide to judge its success or failure'' - Leaders are likely to declare the G20 summit a triumph today, but what will that mean? - 2nd April
 * time to call a halt, Prime Minister'' - Mervyn King was right to attack the Prime Minister's economic plans in advance of the G20 summit - 26th March
 * Brown's profligacy blocks job creation'' - "Unemployment when young creates permanent scars, not temporary blemishes." So said the Bank of England's David Blanchflower on Monday - 24th March
 * the gloom is a shining opportunity'' - Getting it right: in the second of a series of articles on what a Conservative future will hold, Edmund Conway argues for public sector cuts - 19th March
 * of finance ministers' summit'' - Trying to unpick the dynamics of an international summit in the hours and days after it finishes is no easy task - 16th March
 * is how depression looked in the 1930s'' - Recession Britain: Like Herbert Hoover, today's politicians are posing rather than acting - 12th March
 * not yet at the moment of maximum pessimism in this economic crisis'' - The old adage is that buying shares in a falling market is rather like trying to catch a falling knife - 11th March
 * ministers set for clash over economic crisis solutions'' - Ministers from the US and Europe are preparing for a major clash later this week as they wrestle over the agenda for the G20 summit which aims to hatch a solution for the economic crisis - 10th March
 * Bank of England's printing presses are ready to roll'' - The big question is whether the extra cash will actually be spent - 5th March 2009
 * doom and gloom isn't over yet'' - Britons need to face up to its excesses over the previous decade - 26th February 2009
 * bad – but it's worse for everyone else'' - Britain will not be bear the brunt of the economic crisis - 19th February 2009
 * just how bad will the recession be?'' - Ed Balls says Britain faces its worst recession for 100 years, it's hard to disagree - 11th February 2009
 * the rise of protectionism'' - There are a few stock images of protectionism which most of us have in our heads - 28th January 2009
 * really wrong with Sterling?'' - The pound is suffering its worst ever fall in value. Why is it happening and what are the implications? - 24th January 2009
 * we do when interest rates fail'' - Mervyn King sets out the future for monetary policy - 21st January 2009
 * and blue Monday leaves UK banks staring at nationalisation'' - So that was Blue Monday. The most depressing day of the year, according to scientists - 20th January 2009
 * rescue measures might just be working'' - Desperate measures to deal with the financial crisis are the only way to avoid a prolonged recession - 9th January 2009
 * is partly to blame for the recession'' - Daddy, what did you do in the credit crunch? As we sit around the embers of the financial system it is time I got something off my chest: I must take some responsibility for the economic crisis - 5th January 2009
 * for the sequel to the UK bank bail-out'' - One might have hoped for some good news on the first working day of the New Year - 3rd January 2009



Articles: 2008

 * of England's stability warnings were swamped by the market's tide of greed'' - 24th December 2008
 * crisis: Free money coming your way!'' - The crisis is so bad that governments are ready to print money to stop the economy seizing up - 18th December 2008
 * bank rescue plan is just not enough'' - WHAT? "Additional measures"? So cutting interests to the lowest level since 1951, pouring billions into the banking system and slashing VAT was not enough? - 17th December 2008
 * Bank may have to print you a pocketful of cash to spend'' - We are about to enter a weird, parallel universe for monetary policy - 14th December 2008
 * own 'crass' economic policies are the most dangerous threat'' - No doubt about it, there is something wincingly crass about Gordon Brown. His Freudian slip on Wednesday betrayed his conviction that he is single-handedly "saving the world" - 12th December 2008
 * Keynesian dare Alistair Darling be?'' - 30th October 2008
 * Mervyn King have to scare markets?'' - Economists query whether Bank chief's recession warning had to be so stark - 23rd October 2008
 * slump since Great Depression'' - Major industrialised economies will suffer the worst slump since the 1930s, according to new research from Deutsche Bank - 20th October 2008
 * crisis: Has the £2 trillion financial bail-out package failed?'' - 17th October 2008
 * shows we were too slow to fix world's debt addiction'' - Imagine a hospital where doctors try as hard as they can to ignore a patient’s symptoms - 16th October 2008
 * at the end of the tunnel?'' - For the first time in weeks, if not months, the markets have had an adrenaline shot of confidence - 14th October 2008
 * for the markets to open'' - It is a fitting, nail-biting end to the most fraught month of financial trauma on record - 12th October 2008
 * of England goes nuclear with interest rate cut'' - Having tried almost every other weapon in its arsenal to tackle the credit crunch, today the Bank of England has gone nuclear - 9th October 2008
 * Brown must grasp the nettle of the financial crisis'' - Here they come - the credit crunch cavalry; here to sweep us away from all this economic misery. In they waft from the five-star hotels and embassies of Washington, carried aloft on a ribbon of dry ice and dollar bills - 5th October 2008
 * crisis: Western world will become significantly less wealthy'' - Corporate America has just lost a chunk of its value the size of the Indian economy - 30th September 2008
 * our very own Great Depression'' - Britain survived the slump after the Wall Street Crash quite easily: this time it may be different - 27th September 2008
 * needs a US-style financial system bail-out'' - 26th September 2008
 * dollar set to be major casualty of bailout'' - Dollar's long-term status as a reserve currency will come under new pressure from bailout - 22nd September 2008
 * Gordon Brown living on borrowed time?'' - With recession looming and the Government sinking, Gordon Brown and Alistair Darling have launched a rescue plan for the housing market. But will it work? - Telegraph.co.uk - Wednesday 3rd September 2008 (with Andrew Porter)



News & updates:

 * My year at Harvard - Brits are flocking to US universities such as Harvard. Edmund Conway explains their appeal - The Daily Telegraph, 12th August 2011

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Links:

 * http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ed_Conway