Chris Dillow



Profile:


Full name: Chris Dillow

Area of interest: Finance (esp. macroeconomics, financial economics, behavioural finance)

Journals: Investors Chronicle

Email: [mailto:chrisdillow@msn.com chrisdillow@msn.com]

Website: InvestorsChronicle.co / Chris Dillow

Blog: Stumbling and Mumbling

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Biography:
Education: Wyggeston Boys School (grammar); Corpus Christi College, Oxford; Manchester University

Career: UK economist with one of Japan's biggest banks (eight years. His main interests now are macroeconomics, financial economics and behavioural finance

Current position/role: Commentator


 * also writes/written for: frequent guest contibutor to The Times

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Viewpoints/Insight: The normblog: profile 112: Chris Dillow - November 11, 2005

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Books & Debate:
(see: Harriman House info)
 * The End of Politics: New Labour and the folly of managerialism OCLC 141381965, 2007

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Investors Chronicle:
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Website: InvestorsChronicle.co / Chris Dillow

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Articles: 2009

 * The importance of inventory - Despite the decline of manufacturing, the inventory cycle is still mightily important - 10th July 2009
 * More QE a matter of time - The Bank of England held off print more money this time, but most expect it to do so next month - 10th July 2009
 * The real US unemployment problem - America's labour market problem is too little job creation, not too many job losses - 7th July 2009
 * Risk-taking pays off - Risky stocks did very well in the second quarter, at the expense of safe ones - 7th July 2009
 * Bank to step up QE - The Bank of England could step up its gilt buying on Thursday - good news for markets - 6th July 2009
 * UK plc rides out the storm - Outside the banking industry, British companies are doing remarkably well - 2nd July 2009
 * Bank crisis not over yet - Banks still aren't lending money, something that could cause the 'green shoots' to wither - 29th June 2009
 * King's "fiscal warning" - Mervyn King's warning about government borrowing is weaker than it seems - 25th June 2009
 * What lending matters? - ECONOMICS: Bank lending to companies is still weak. This matters for long-term growth - 23rd June 2009
 * Unemployment is worse than it looks - The rise in joblessness might appear less than expected, but the underlying message is grim - 17th June 2009
 * High inflation is good news - ECONOMICS: The fact that inflation is slow to fall means it will stay low as the economy recovers - 16th June 2009
 * The indestructible US economy - ECONOMICS: The US non-financial economy is doing very well in the face of disaste - 15th June 2009
 * Tied to the dying - ECONOMICS: One obstacle to recovery is simply that the UK is in the wrong part of the world - 11th June 2009
 * Is the recession over? - ECONOMICS: Today's figures suggest, astonishingly, that the recession might have ended already - 10th June 2009
 * Deflation off the agenda - MARKETS: Forget about depression and deflation - inflation expectations have returned to normal - 8th June 2009
 * Is there an inflation problem? - Why hasn't inflation fallen as much as expected? - 17th February 2009
 * Is monetary policy working? - Lower interest rates might work - 5th February 2009
 * Glimmers of hope - Not quite green shoots territory yet, but there are some grounds for optimism - 27th January 2009
 * Darling's over-optimism - Alistair Darling's economic forecasts in November were too optimistic. But don't be too hard on him, says our economics commentator - 23rd January 2009
 * Too many people, not too few jobs - Today's unemployment figures are misleading. Here's why - 21st January 2009
 * Corporate profits surprisingly strong - Corporate profits have held up well so far, but does this mean we'll escape a deep recession? - 14th January 2009



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Articles:

 * The degree of difference in graduates' pay - University applicants have hit record levels, but do higher qualifications still pay off in the jobs market? - 17th February 2009
 * Don't bank on a caring, sharing recession - There is a constant refrain that hard times will encourage people to look after each other. In fact they bring crime and racism - 14th January 2009



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