Harold Wincott

Harold Edward Wincott CBE (13 September 1906 – 5 March 1969) was a British economist and journalist.

Early life

Harold Wincott was born in north London, where his father ran a small family business of heraldic engravers.[1] He went to Hornsey County School, leaving at 16.[1]

Career

Wincott edited the Investors Chronicle for twenty-one years and was a columnist for the Financial Times. He was appointed a CBE in 1963 and wrote pamphlets for the Institute of Economic Affairs, a free-market think-tank based in Westminster, London.

Legacy

According to one contemporary, Wincott had an "enormous influence on City thinking"; it was Wincott who invented the character Solomon Binding in his column as a joke on the numerous "solemn and binding" pledges made at TUC Conferences.[2] The Conservative politician John Biffen has claimed: "If I had a mentor, it was probably Harold Wincott".[3]

The Wincott Foundation was established in 1970 in honour of Harold Wincott's achievements, with the purpose of supporting and encouraging high quality economic, financial and business journalism. The Foundation sponsors annual awards for economic, financial and business journalism in the UK, and provides fellowships and scholarships to journalists.

Bibliography

  • The Stock Exchange (1946)
  • Beginners Please (1961)
  • The business of capitalism: A selection of unconventional essays on economic problems of the 1960s (1968)
gollark: So instead of `int*` you should be doing `int** const*`.
gollark: It's good practice to use as many pointers as possible in order to improve performance and increase generality.
gollark: Idea: dynamic generation of arbitrary private channels in ubquarantine.
gollark: The advantage of dynamic linking is that you can make ridiculously tiny binaries and show off how small* your program is.
gollark: Yes, dynamic linking actually very not good.

References

  1. Geoffrey E. Wood (27 July 2016). Explorations in Economic Liberalism: The Wincott Lectures. Springer. pp. ix–xi. ISBN 978-1-349-24967-1.
  2. Richard Cockett, Thinking the Unthinkable: Think-Tanks and the Economic Counter-Revolution, 1931 - 1983 (HarperCollins, 1995), p. 185.
  3. Cockett, p. 169.

Further reading

  • Kieran Heinemann: Popular Investment and Speculation in Britain, 1918–1987, PhD dissertation, University of Cambridge, 2017, ch. 3.
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