St Edmund's College, Cambridge

St Edmund's College is pleased to announce the second in a series of biennial lectures in memory of the late Professor G.L.S. Shackle.

'Risk, Uncertainty and Financial Stability'

Professor Charles Goodhart CBE FBA, Norman Sosnow Professor of Banking and Finance, London School of Economics and Political Science from 1985-2002, now Emeritus; Joint Founder, 1987, Deputy Director 1987-2005 and Member since 2005, Financial Markets Group, London School of Economics. External member of the Monetary Policy Committee, 1997-2000. Publications include: Money, Information and Uncertainty, 1975; the Evolution of Central Banks, 1985, The Operation and Regulation of Financial Markets 1987, The Future of Central banking, 1994.

To be held at 5.00pm on Thursday 6th March 2008 at the Faculty of Law in Lecture Room LG19, West Road, Cambridge CB3 9DZ. All are welcome. Entry is free. A reception will be held following the lecture and refreshments will be provided.

Enquiries: please contact the Master's Secretary (masters.office@st-edmunds.cam.ac.uk) Tel: 01223 336122.


Professor Charles Goodhart, CBE, FBA is a member of the Financial Markets Group at the London School of Economics, having previously, 1987-2005, been its Deputy Director. Until his retirement in 2002, he had been the Norman Sosnow Professor of Banking and Finance at LSE since 1985. Before then, he had worked at the Bank of England for seventeen years as a monetary adviser, becoming a Chief Adviser in 1980. In 1997 he was appointed one of the outside independent members of the Bank of England's new Monetary Policy Committee until May 2000. Earlier he had taught at Cambridge and LSE. Besides numerous articles, he has written a couple of books on monetary history; a graduate monetary textbook, Money, Information and Uncertainty (2nd Ed. 1989); two collections of papers on monetary policy, Monetary Theory and Practice (1984) and The Central Bank and The Financial System (1995); and a number of books and articles on Financial Stability, on which subject he was Adviser to the Governor of the Bank of England, 2002-2004, and numerous other studies relating to financial markets and to monetary policy and history. In his spare time he is a sheep farmer (loss-making).


Professor G.L.S. Shackle was Brunner Professor of Economic Science at the University of Liverpool from 1951 to 1969 and Emeritus Professor until he died in March 1992. In 1967 he was elected Fellow of the British Academy and in 1976 gave the Keynes Lecture at the British Academy.