TOPICS
Economic Overview
BIOGRAPHY
Rachel Lomax became Deputy Governor on 1 July 2003. In addition to her membership of the Monetary Policy Committee, she has specific responsibility within the Bank for Monetary Policy, including monetary assessment and money market operations.
Before joining the Bank, she was Permanent Secretary of the Department for Transport. Between 1999 and 2002 she held the same position at the Department for Work and Pensions (previously the Department of Social Security) and, from 1996 to 1999, at the Welsh Office. She was a Vice President and Chief of Staff to the President of the World Bank in 1995-6 and Head of the Economic and Domestic Secretariat at the Cabinet Office in 1994. Her earlier career was spent at HM Treasury, which she joined in 1968 and where she worked on a wide range of macro economic, monetary, and financial issues. She was Principal Private Secretary to the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Rt Hon Nigel Lawson, in the mid 1980s, and Deputy Chief Economic Adviser in the early 1990s.
Rachel Lomax is on the Board of the Royal National Theatre and of DeMontfort University. She graduated from Girton College Cambridge in 1966 and obtained an MSc in Economics from the London School of Economics in 1968. She has two grown up sons and a granddaughter.
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THE CLIENT'S VIEW
by Cate McReadie / Grant Thornton
The qualities I look for in a speaker are knowledge of their subject area, a link to the theme of the event and relevance to the audience so they can make a connection.
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It's worth paying a premium for a big name for a prestigious, long-standing or launch event. People will remember the speaker, not what they ate or if the room was too warm. Even when budgets are constrained, I see value in guest speakers; without them the event can feel flat, especially if speakers have been used in the past.
I measure success by the atmosphere at the event and the buzz in the room - plus feedback from clients and speakers themselves.


£5K TO £10K






