Douglas McWilliams is one of Europe’s leading economists and most respected economic forecasters and analysts of UK and world economic trends. He is deputy chairman and founder of the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), one of the UK’s leading commercial economics think tanks, and one of the top... Read more
Douglas McWilliams is one of Europe’s leading economists and most respected economic forecasters and analysts of UK and world economic trends. He is deputy chairman and founder of the Centre for Economics and Business Research (CEBR), one of the UK’s leading commercial economics think tanks, and one of the top UK economic forecasting groups, with specialist knowledge of key industrial sectors including road and rail transport, retailing, cars, vans, trucks, property, construction, plastics and information technology.
McWilliams currently advises 25 of the FTSE companies on economic and business trends and the implications for their strategies. His clients also include most of the UK’s top retailers, four out of the UK’s top ten legal firms and some of the leading firms of accountants, including the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales (ICAEW). At a local level, McWilliams is the acknowledged expert on the economy of London and the prospects for the financial City of London.
He is famed for his communications skills and is one of the most widely quoted economists. He has a unique talent for being able to put across complex economic facts and forecasts in terms that can be understood by non-specialists. He has received multiple awards for forecasting.
McWilliams was Chief Economic Adviser to the Confederation of British Industry from 1988 to 1992. Previously he was IBM UK Chief Economist, and Chairman of the economics forecasting group of UNICE, the European federation of employers’ organisations from 1980 to 1985.
He was Visiting Professor at Kingston University Business School from 1988 to 1998, and a member of the Council of the Foundation for Manufacturing and Industry from 1993 to 1998, a member of the Council of the Institute for Fiscal Studies 1989-99. Co chairman of the UKs ’Growth Commission 2023-24; He was appointed the Gresham Professor of Commerce in 2012.
He is a regular contributor to various media outlets. He holds an MA in philosophy, politics and economics, and MPhil in economics, from the University of Oxford.