![]() | Dr. Linda Yueh is a fellow in economics at Oxford University, a senior fellow at the London Business School, and an economics commentator. She directs the China Growth Centre (CGC) at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, is an associate of the Globalisation programme of the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) and the IDEAS research centre at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), and a fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts (FRSA). Her work examines major economies such as Britain, China, United States, Europe as well as developing countries, and her research focuses on global imbalances, economic growth, and the rise of emerging economies. She is a regular contributor to media coverage of economic and business issues as an economics correspondent for Bloomberg TV. Dr. Yueh has published widely in academic journals, specialist magazines, and several books. She is the Series Editor of the Economic Development and Growth book series for World Scientific Publishing. Her recent books include: Macroeconomics (co-authored with Graeme Chamberlin) which is a recommended textbook of the UK Government Economic Service (GES), The Economy of China, Globalisation and Economic Growth in China (co-edited with Yang Yao), The Law and Economics of Globalisation: New Challenges for a World in Flux (editor), and The Future of Asian Trade and Growth (editor). She is a member of the World Economic Forum (WEF) Global Agenda Council on Energy Security and has advised the Asian Development Bank, UK Trade and Industry (UKTI), the Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU), among others. |
Saturday 1 November 2008, 3.30pm Lecture Theatre 1
Emerging Economies – Question Time
The Law and Economics of Globalisation: New Challenges for a World in Flux (editor) (2009)
The Economy of China (Edward Elgar, 2010)
The Future of Asian Trade and Growth (Routledge, 2009)
With Graeme Chamberlin, Macroeconomics, Thomson Learning, 2006
Co-editor with Yang Yao, Globalisation and Economic Growth in China, World Scientific, 2006
"The audience were the stars of the Battle of Ideas - engaged, informed and enthusiastic. As a panellist, I felt both ashamed and educated. Exactly as it should be."
John Street, professor of politics, University of East Anglia