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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p Stephen John Nickell CBE (b. 25 April 1944) is a British economist and former Warden of Nuffield College, Oxford.Nickell was educated at Merchant Taylors' School, Northwood and Pembroke College, Cambridge.From 1965 until 1968 he was a mathematics teacher at Hendon County School.He was a postgraduate student at the London School of Economics, where he took the degree of Master of Science and was awarded the Ely Devons Prize. He worked at the London School of Economics from 1970 until 1984, and again from 1998 until 2006, initially as Lecturer (1970–77), Reader (1977–79), and Professor of Economics (1979–84).From 1984 until 1998 he was Professorial Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford, Professor of Economics in the University of Oxford, and Director of the University of Oxford Institute of Economics and Statistics.From 1998 until 2006 he returned to the London School of Economics as School Professor of Economics.He was a member of the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) from June 2000 to May 2006, when he was replaced by David Blanchflower effective in the June 2006 meeting. In his final six meetings on the MPC, Nickell was the only member in favor of a decrease in the repo rate by 25 basis points; all the other members voted to maintain the repo rate at 4.5% with the exception of David Walton who supported an increase by 25 basis points in Nickell's final meeting.In 2004 he became a Research Fellow of the Institute for the Study of Labor.He took up the post as Warden of Nuffield College, Oxford in 2006, and was the first chair of the National Housing and Planning Advice Unit from June 2007 until November 2009.In June 2007, when interviewed on the state of the UK housing market he was quoted as saying, "It might settle back a little, or remain relatively flat for a bit, but I don't think there's any fundamental overvaluation. Over the next few years it might keep on edging upwards.". The Bank of England estimated that by Q1 2009, due to declining house prices, 7% of owner-occupied mortgagors were in negative equity, equivalent to around 700,000 households.HM The Queen appointed him Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire in the New Year's Honours List 2007 for services to economics.He is a Fellow of the British Academy (elected 1993), a Fellow of the Econometric Society (1980), a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Economic Association (1997), and a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2006). He is a past President of the Royal Economic Society.In July 2008 he was awarded an honorary DSc by the University of Warwick.In a February 2008 Bloomberg interview, shortly before the start of the worst UK recession since the Second World War, he said: 'The actual size of the downturn is minute, how big is it going to be? I don't know, but it won't be very big.''My instinct is that a slowdown in the British economy won't be that slow, I wouldn't do 50 basis points, or a 0.5 percentage point cut, at tomorrow's decision. And the chances of them doing 50 are zero. It makes it look as if you think there's something really serious going on here.'. }

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