Menu Close
Fellow in Economics/Adjunct Professor of Economics, University of Oxford

Dr. Linda Yueh is Fellow in Economics at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford, Adjunct Professor of Economics at London Business School, and Visiting Professor of Economics at Peking University.

She is a broadcaster, including for BBC Radio 4, and was the BBC’s Chief Business Correspondent and host of “Talking Business with Linda Yueh”, as well as Economics Editor for Bloomberg TV.

Dr. Yueh is Director of the China Growth Centre at Oxford, a member of the Policy Committee of the Centre for Economic Performance (CEP) at the London School of Economics and Political Science, an Advisory Board member of The Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF), and a Trustee of the Coutts Foundation.

She has advised the World Bank, European Commission, Asian Development Bank, World Economic Forum, among many others. She has been a Non-Executive Director of several FTSE companies, an advisor to the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC), and served on the Board of London & Partners, the official promotion agency for London.

She is widely published in academic journals and is the editor of the Economic Growth and Development book series at Routledge.

Her books include: Macroeconomics (co-authored with Graeme Chamberlin) (2006), Globalisation and Economic Growth in China (co-edited with Yang Yao) (2006), The Law and Economics of Globalisation: New Challenges for a World in Flux (editor) (2009), The Future of Asian Trade and Growth: Economic Development with the Emergence of China (editor) (2009), Enterprising China: Business, Economics and Legal Developments Since 1979 (2011), the award-winning The Economy of China (2010, paperback in 2012), and China’s Growth: The Making of an Economic Superpower (2013) to be published in Chinese in 2015.

Her latest book, China’s Macroeconomic Policy, was published in March 2015.

Experience

  • –present
    Fellow by Special Election in Economics and Research Lecturer in Economics, University of Oxford