BIO:
Professor Jack Gray spent 20 years as an intellectually promiscuous academic mathematician/philosopher, followed by 20 years in investment management in Australia and the US. He now has a portfolio of jobs in the investment industry and academia, including membership in the Paul Woolley Centre for Capital Market Dysfunctionality at the University of Technology Sydney and LSE.
INTERESTS:
My concern about behaviour patterns within the financial services industry has grown as we go deeper into Minsky’s stage of ‘Fund manager capitalism’ in which managers have “the hand” and so become rent-seekers. Inapproriate alignment of interests and excessive short-termism are but two particular consequences that might be dented by the efforts of an energetic taskforce.
e-mail: jackgray08@live.com.au
“My concern about behaviour patterns within the financial services industry has grown as we go deeper into Minsky’s stage of ‘Fund manager capitalism’ in which managers have “the hand” and so become rent-seekers. Inapproriate alignment of interests and excessive short-termism are but two particular consequences that might be dented by the efforts of an energetic taskforce.”
“My concern about behaviour patterns within the financial services industry has grown as we go deeper into Minsky’s stage of ‘Fund manager capitalism’ in which managers have “the hand” and so become rent-seekers. Inapproriate alignment of interests and excessive short-termism are but two particular consequences that might be dented by the efforts of an energetic taskforce.”
“My concern about behaviour patterns within the financial services industry has grown as we go deeper into Minsky’s stage of ‘Fund manager capitalism’ in which managers have “the hand” and so become rent-seekers. Inapproriate alignment of interests and excessive short-termism are but two particular consequences that might be dented by the efforts of an energetic taskforce.”
“My concern about behaviour patterns within the financial services industry has grown as we go deeper into Minsky’s stage of ‘Fund manager capitalism’ in which managers have “the hand” and so become rent-seekers. Inapproriate alignment of interests and excessive short-termism are but two particular consequences that might be dented by the efforts of an energetic taskforce.”
