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Saul Estrin

Professor of Economics and Deputy Dean at London Business School


Saul Estrin is Professor of Economics and Deputy Dean (Faculty and Academic Planning) at London Business School. He is also Director of the CIS-Middle Europe Centre and Programme Director of the Consortium for Executive Development, an innovative benchmarking programme for senior executives in BA, BT, Lloyds TSB, Marks and Spencer and Vauxhall. He is an Institutional Micro-Economist with extensive knowledge of several central and eastern European countries, how they work and the process of change within them. He was previously Lecturer in Economics at London School of Economics, Southampton University and he has held visiting appointments at Cornell University, the European University Institute, Stanford University and the University of Michigan Business School. Professor Estrin received his BA from St. Johns College, Cambridge, his MA from Cambridge and his D.Phil. from Sussex.

Areas of Research:

  • Privatization and Enterprise Restructuring in Central and Eastern Europe
  • Regional Strategic Planning / Investment Opportunities
  • Labour Market Questions
  • Profit Sharing
  • Management / Employee Buyouts
  • Management Boards Structure and Priorities
  • Economic Policy
  • Europe Union Enlargement


Selected Publications:

Professor Estrin's recent publications include the widely cited Privatisation in Central and Eastern Europe (Longmans, 1994) and Foreign Direct Investment into Transitional Economics: A Case Study Approach. He has also written numerous articles for scholarly journals, including the Quarterly Journal of Economics, European Economic Review, Journal of Public Economics and Economica, as well as for practitioner journals such as Business Strategy Review and articles for the Financial Times.

Consulting/ Clients:

He has been consultant to the OECD, the World Bank and the European Community as well as a variety of international companies and banks. These companies include: Coopers and Lybrand, Unilever, Barings, ABN-AMRO Bank and the Royal Bank of Scotland.



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