Dr John Edwards

Nonresident Fellow
Areas of expertise

Australian economic policy; monetary policy; international economics; banking

Dr John Edwards
Biography
Publications

John Edwards is a Senior Fellow at the Lowy Institute and an Adjunct Professor with the John Curtin Institute of Public Policy at Curtin University. He is also a board member of the industry superannuation fund Cbus and of Frontier Advisors. He was member of the Board of the Reserve Bank of Australia from 2011 to 2016. In 2015 he was appointed by the Commonwealth as a member of a three person panel to review the Fair Work Act. From 2009 to 2011 he was Director for Economic Planning and Development for the Economic Development Board of the Kingdom of Bahrain. From 1997 to 2009 Dr Edwards was Chief Economist for Australia and New Zealand for the global financial group, HSBC. In 2008 he was given leave of absence from HSBC to accept a secondment to the Australian Treasury as Chief Adviser, Financial Markets. At the same time he was appointed to join chairman David Mortimer AO in a two-member Review of Australian Trade and Investment Policies. From 1991 to 1994 John was principal economic adviser to Treasurer and then Prime Minister, Paul Keating. In that role he had particular responsibility for international trade issues, labour market reform, and monetary policy.

Earlier in his career he was a political and economic journalist in Sydney, Canberra, and Washington. He joined Australian Financial Review in 1970, and his subsequent roles included political correspondent for The Australian, economics editor of The Bulletin magazine and Sydney Morning Herald correspondent in Washington, DC.

After leaving the Prime Minister’s office in 1994 John was an adviser at Macquarie Bank, and then Chief Economist for Société Generale in Australia, before joining HSBC. From 1994 to 1996 he was also appointed by the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs as adviser to the Australian member of the APEC Eminent Persons Group and to the two Australian members of the APEC Business Advisory Council.

His articles on economic issues have appeared in the Financial Times, the Australian Financial ReviewThe AustralianNikkei Asian Review and numerous other publications. He has given evidence on economic issues before parliamentary committees, and presented briefings for government officials and ministers.

John has published six books, including most recently a two-volume biography of Australia’s wartime prime minister, John Curtin’s War. The first volume won the 2018 Prime Minister’s Prize for Literature in the history section. His other books include a narrative history of the MX missile program Superweapon (Norton 1982) and an account of Australian economic policy making under the former Treasurer and Prime Minister Keating: The Inside Story (Viking 1996). His published research for the Lowy Institute includes two Lowy Institute Papers, Quiet Boom (2006) and Beyond the Boom (Penguin Specials, 2014). Other papers for the Institute include How to be exceptional: Australia in the slowing global economy (2016) and Economic Conflict between America and China: A truce declared, the talks begin (2018).

John holds PhD and M Phil degrees in economics from George Washington University and a BA from Sydney University. His doctoral dissertation was in the field of monetary economics.

 

How Trump's economic plans will come unstuck
How Trump's economic plans will come unstuck
At some point the Trump Administration will have to confront the fact that the US economy is in better shape than Trump depicted during the campaign.
Australia's economy in 2017: Bad news for jobs but no recession
Commentary
Australia's economy in 2017: Bad news for jobs but no recession
John Edwards wrties in the Australian Financial Review on the prospects for the Australian economy in 2017. Photo: Getty Images/Brett Hemmings John Edwards
How to be exceptional: Australia in the slowing global economy
Analyses
How to be exceptional: Australia in the slowing global economy
While the US and UK have seen political rebellions against migration and trade, Australia has tranquilly entered its 26th year of growth. Australia can in coming decades increase…
Trapped in history
Commentary
Trapped in history
Trapped in historyJohn EdwardsThe Australian Financial Review21 March 2015Click here for the online text.John Edwards
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