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 [fr]
|
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]
|