Frances Cairncross


Dame Frances Anne Cairncross, is a British economist, journalist and academic. She is a Senior Fellow at the School of Public Policy, UCLA. She chairs the Executive Committee of the Institute for Fiscal Studies. From 2004 to 2014, she was the Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.

Education and personal life

Cairncross was born on 30 August 1944 to Mary Frances and the economist, Sir Alexander Kirkland Cairncross. She attended Laurel Bank School in Glasgow and studied for an MA in History at St Anne's College, Oxford, graduating in 1965. She went on to study for an MA in Economics at Brown University, Providence, Rhode Island. She holds honorary degrees from Trinity College Dublin, City University, and the universities of Glasgow, Birmingham, Bristol, Cardiff, Loughborough and Kingston. She became a Fellow of St Anne's College in 1993.
Cairncross married the journalist Hamish McRae in 1971; the couple have two daughters. Her uncle, John Cairncross was an intelligence officer, spy, double agent and a translator of literature. Her brother is the epidemiologist Sandy Cairncross.

Career

Cairncross worked at The Times, The Banker and The Observer. From 1973-1984, Cairncross was on the staff of The Guardian newspaper serving as its economics correspondent from 1973-1981 and as women's page editor from 1981-1984. She joined the staff of The Economist in 1984 working on coverage of the environment, media and public policy. From 1999-2004, she was management editor.
She chaired the Economic and Social Research Council between 2001 and 2007 and was President of the British Science Association.
Her book, The Company of the Future, was published in 2002 by Harvard Business School Press. In March 2003, she won the Institute of Internal Auditors' annual award for business and management journalism. Cairncross is also the author of The Death of Distance, a study of the economic and social effects of the global communications revolution, first published in 1997 and re-published in a new edition in 2001.
Cairncross was Rector of Exeter College, Oxford from October 2004 to October 2014.
Cairncross was a non-executive director of Stramongate Ltd from 2005-2011 and a presenter of BBC Radio 4's Analysis programme. In 2004-05, Cairncross held the honorary post of High Sheriff of Greater London.
From 2015, Cairncross is Chair of the Court of Heriot-Watt University.

Controversy

In January 1988, Frances Cairncross and Mary Ellen Synon wrote a news article for The Economist that depicted the Republic of Ireland as bureaucratic and impoverished. The article caused anger within the Fianna Fáil government of the time. The Irish Department of Foreign Affairs also criticised the piece, stating that the Economist article "did serious damage to the image of Ireland overseas".

Awards and honours

Cairncross has received several awards and honorary degrees from a multiple universities.