Andrew Graham (economist)
Andrew Graham is a British political economist. From 2001 to 2011 he was master of Balliol College, Oxford. he is chair of trustees of the Europaeum, a member of the Advisory Board of Ethics in Technology, Hamburg University of Technology, and senior fellow of the Oxford Internet Institute (OII).
He is an honorary fellow of Balliol College and of St Edmund Hall, and an honorary doctor of Civil Law, awarded by the University of Oxford in 2003.
Early life and education
Graham was born in Perranporth, Cornwall. He is the son of the novelist Winston Graham. He was educated at Truro Cathedral School and Charterhouse School before reading Philosophy, Politics and Economics at St Edmund Hall, University of Oxford.Career
On graduation, Graham joined the National Economic Development Office followed by the Department of Economic Affairs (DEA). From the DEA, he moved to No. 10 as economic assistant to Thomas Balogh, then economic adviser to the Cabinet, but de facto adviser to the Prime Minister, Harold Wilson. From 1968 to 1969, Graham was economic advisor to the Prime Minister.Graham was appointed fellow and tutor in Economics at Balliol College, Oxford. From 1974 to 1976, on leave of absence from Balliol, he was a member of the No. 10 Policy Unit as economic advisor to the Prime Minister, Harold Wilson. In 1988 he became economic advisor to John Smith MP, until Smith's death in 1994. During this time Graham was also consultant to the BBC, putting forward the case for public service broadcasting (PSB). Working initially with Gavyn Davies, he has continued to publish on this subject.
In 1997 Graham was appointed Acting Master of Balliol. He was subsequently elected Master of Balliol. He was an elected member of the University of Oxford Council. In 2001, Graham raised £15 million and founded the Oxford Internet Institute (OII), the first multidisciplinary research centre at a major university examining the effects of the internet on society. He was OII acting director and chair of its advisory board. During his tenure as master, Balliol extended its fundraising, lowered its costs, improved its overall finances, and in 2010 set up the Balliol Interdisciplinary Institute. In 2008 Balliol obtained the most first class degrees in finals while the men's and, later, the women's rowers became Head of the River. In 2011 the establishment of the Balliol Historic Collections Centre in the fully renovated St Cross Church was completed, aided by a donation of £1 million from the Shirley Foundation. He was acting warden of Rhodes House and a Rhodes Foundation Scholarship Trust, trustee.
On 20 December 2024 Graham was appointed Chair of Trustees at the Europaeum, having previously served as its Chair of the Academic Council, Executive Chair, and Trustee. As part of restructuring, Graham created the Europaeum Scholars' Programme, securing agreement and raising external funding. Europaeum university membership rose from eleven in 2016 to seventeen by 2024. The regeneration of the Europaeum has been recognised by the award of the Scaliger medal by Leiden University, and by the award of a gold medal by Charles University, Prague.
Other activities and appointments
- Member, International Labour Organization (ILO)/Jobs and Skills Programme for Africa Employment Advisory Mission to Ethiopia
- Founding Member and Trustee of Oxford Policy Institute, now Oxford Policy Management (OPM)
- Member of the Media Advisory Committee to the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR)
- Trustee of the Foundation for Information Policy Research (FIPR)
- Board Member of Channel 4 television
- Trustee of the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation
- Director of Scott Trust Limited, owners of The Guardian
- Consultant to Mammoth Screen for the BBC TV series, Poldark, based on the novels of his father, Winston Graham
- Trustee of Reprieve
- President of the Perranzabuloe Museum Trust