Difference between revisions of "Cento Veljanovski"

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[[Image:Pic cento.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Cento Veljanovski]]
 
[[Image:Pic cento.jpg|thumb|150px|right|Cento Veljanovski]]
'''Dr Cento Gavril Veljanovski''' (born 19 February 1953) is a neoliberal economist and business consultant closeley affiliated to the seminal free market think-tank the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] as well as the [[European Policy Forum]]. He has authored a number of reports arguing for the privitisation and deregulation of the British media, as well as public utilities like gas and telecommunications.
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'''Dr Cento Gavril Veljanovski''' (born 19 February 1953) is a neoliberal economist and business consultant closely affiliated with the seminal free market think-tank the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] as well as the [[European Policy Forum]]. He has authored a number of reports arguing for the privitisation and deregulation of the British media, as well as public utilities like gas and telecommunications.
  
 
==Biography==
 
==Biography==
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===Institute of Economic Affairs===
 
===Institute of Economic Affairs===
In 1987, Veljanovski left UCL to join the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] (IEA), where he was research and editorial director until 1991. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> Veljanovski replaced the IEA's first editorial director [[Arthur Seldon]], who was appointed to the post in June 1959.
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In 1987, Veljanovski left UCL to join the [[Institute of Economic Affairs]] (IEA), where he was research and editorial director until 1991. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> Veljanovski replaced the IEA's first editorial director [[Arthur Seldon]], who was appointed to the post in June 1959 and along with [[Ralph Harris]] was one of the two major figures behind the organisation.
  
Veljanovski's major contribution to the moves to privitise and deregulate British broadcasting during this period was a book he edited for IEA called ''Freedom in Broadcasting''. Published in 1989, ''Freedom in Broadcasting'' (which also happened to be the title of [[Rupert Murdoch]]'s notorious MacTaggart Lecture that same year) included contributions from some of the major figures pushing for neoliberal reform of broadcasting including [[Samuel Brittan]] and [[Alan Peacock]]. <ref>[[Alan Peacock]] contributed two chapters: 'Competition in broadcasting' and 'The Peacock Report: some unanswered questions'. [[Samuel Brittan|Samuel Brittan's]] chapter was called 'The future of public service broadcasting'.</ref>
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Veljanovski's major contribution to the moves to privitise and/or deregulate British broadcasting during this period was a book he edited for IEA called ''Freedom in Broadcasting''. Published in 1989, ''Freedom in Broadcasting'' (which also happened to be the title of [[Rupert Murdoch]]'s notorious MacTaggart Lecture that same year) included contributions from some of the major figures pushing for neoliberal reform of broadcasting including [[Samuel Brittan]] and [[Alan Peacock]]. <ref>[[Alan Peacock]] contributed two chapters: 'Competition in broadcasting' and 'The Peacock Report: some unanswered questions'. [[Samuel Brittan|Samuel Brittan's]] chapter was called 'The future of public service broadcasting'.</ref>
  
Whilst at IEA, Veljanovski acted as a consultant to a number of media organisations and began to take on executive roles in corporations with interests in the media sector. In 1990 he was reported to be a director of the consultancy Putnam, Hayes and Bartlett. <ref>'Cable forecasts "should be lower"', New Media Markets, 8 November 1990</ref> He was also reportedly employed as a consultant to the [[BBC]]. <ref>Georgina Henry, 'BBC defends job for Mandelson', ''Guardian'', 3 October 1990; Melinda Wittstock, 'BBC defends Labour choice', ''The Times'', 3 October 1990</ref> This was despite the fact that Veljanovski was ideologically committed to ending public service broadcasting. That year he also joined the 'economic consultancy' corporation [[Lexecon]], where he was a director until 1994.  
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Whilst at IEA, Veljanovski also acted as a consultant for and director at a number of corporations. In 1990 he was reported to be a director of the consultancy firm Putnam, Hayes and Bartlett. <ref>'Cable forecasts "should be lower"', New Media Markets, 8 November 1990</ref> He was also reportedly employed as a consultant to the [[BBC]]. <ref>Georgina Henry, 'BBC defends job for Mandelson', ''Guardian'', 3 October 1990; Melinda Wittstock, 'BBC defends Labour choice', ''The Times'', 3 October 1990</ref> This was despite the fact that he was ideologically committed to abolishing public service broadcasting. That year he also joined the 'economic consultancy' corporation [[Lexecon]], where he was a director until 1994.
  
 
===Lobbying for Murdoch===
 
===Lobbying for Murdoch===
Line 20: Line 20:
  
 
===Life after the IEA===
 
===Life after the IEA===
Veljanovski left the IEA in 1991. From 1991 to 1994 he was an economic advisor to the Republic of Macedonia. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> According to ''Euromoney'', 'Veljanovski convinced Jacques Attali, president of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, to provide Macedonia with urgently needed technical assistance for a privatisation programme, <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref> which he helped draw up. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Search for Prosperity',  
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Veljanovski left the IEA in 1991 (although he remains an IEA Fellow). From 1991 to 1994 he was an economic advisor to the Republic of Macedonia. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> According to ''Euromoney'', 'Veljanovski convinced Jacques Attali, president of the [[European Bank for Reconstruction and Development]], to provide Macedonia with urgently needed technical assistance for a privatisation programme', <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref> which he then helped draw up. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Search for Prosperity',  
''Euromoney'', December 1992; p. 2</ref> According to ''Euromoney'', 'the new privatisation law' was 'central to the crisis programme' and 'concentrated on the 1,450 key [socially-owned] enterprises at the core of the economy'. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref> The article continued:
+
''Euromoney'', December 1992; p. 2</ref> The new privatisation law was, according to ''Euromoney'', 'central to the crisis programme' and 'concentrated on the 1,450 key [socially-owned] enterprises at the core of the economy'. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref> The article continued:
  
<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">Except for a few strategic industries, there will be no legal distinction between local and foreign investors. Miljovski sees this as a way of countering potentially dangerous nationalistic policies, while Veljanovski shrugs off critics on the far left who are wary of opening the floodgates to foreign control: "It's not a case of ripping off Macedonia. The whole issue is that only foreign ownership will bring in new capital, new links to financial institutions, new know-how and management skills," he says. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref></blockquote>
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<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">Except for a few strategic industries, there will be no legal distinction between local and foreign investors. Miljovski [the Minister overseeing the programme] sees this as a way of countering potentially dangerous nationalistic policies, while Veljanovski shrugs off critics on the far left who are wary of opening the floodgates to foreign control: "It's not a case of ripping off Macedonia. The whole issue is that only foreign ownership will bring in new capital, new links to financial institutions, new know-how and management skills," he says. <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref></blockquote>
  
In another article ''Euromoney'' writes that Veljanovski 'sees the speedy introduction of foreign banks as imperative to the realisation of his privatisation plans.' <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Banks Go Back to Basics', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.18</ref>
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''Euromoney'' reported that Veljanovski 'sees the speedy introduction of foreign banks as imperative to the realisation of his privatisation plans.' <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Banks Go Back to Basics', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.18</ref> In another article ''Euromoney'' reported that, 'When Veljanovski asked whether the Macedonian people feared foreign capital would exploit the country, he was told: "Come and exploit us. It can't be worse than what we have now!"' <ref>Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', ''Euromoney'', December 1992; p.22</ref> As with elsewhere in the former Soviet Union, the privatisation process was highly corrupt and economic power simply passed to the old industrial managers with support from the state. Looking back on the privatisation process, the academic and one time Macedonian finance minister Trajko Slaveski wrote:
  
In 1993 he joined the board of the cable television programmer [[Flextech]] where he was a non-executive director until 1995. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> [[Flextech]] started life as an oil services company. It first moved into media in 1989 when it purchased a stake in the cable television broadcaster The Children's Channel during a restructuring of the company. Another shareholder in The Children's Channel was the US cable TV company TeleCommunications Inc, which in December 1993 bought a 60 per cent stake in [[Flextech]] and put the company in control of UK cable channels. <ref>Jeff Ferry, 'Flextech's profitless prosperity', ''Director'', August 1994; p.28</ref> Flextech subsequently entered into a 50 per cent joint venture with BBC Worldwide called UKTV. It was subsequently merged with Telewest and then Virgin Media.
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<blockquote style="background-color:ivory;border:1pt solid Darkgoldenrod;padding:1%;font-size:10pt">The method for privatisation of medium-sized and large enterprises that has been most favoured by the Privitisation Agency is a variant of a managment buyout... The managers of enterprises saw these developments as a sign that they could do whatever they wanted because the government had made a political decision that they were the "chosen" future owners. The press reported many abuses of the involuntary transfer of shares from workers to managers for a nominal price, even free, under threats, open or tacit, of firing those who opposed the "offer one cannot refuse." It is enough to mention that all of this has been happening in the country with the highest unemployment rate in Europe. <ref>Trajko Slaveski, 'Privatization in the Republic of Macedonia: Five Years After', ''Eastern European Economics'', Vol. 35, No. 1 (Jan. - Feb., 1997), pp. 31-51</ref></blockquote>
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 +
In 1993 Veljanovski joined the board of the cable television programmer [[Flextech]] where he was a non-executive director until 1995. <ref>Debrett's People of Today, [http://www.debretts.com/people/biographies/search/results/12710/Cento%20VELJANOVSKI.aspx Dr Cento Veljanovski] [Accessed 15 October 2009]</ref> [[Flextech]], which was then Britain's second largest Pay-TV provider, started life as an oil services company. It first moved into media in 1989 when it purchased a stake in the cable television broadcaster The Children's Channel during a restructuring of the company. Another shareholder in The Children's Channel was the US cable TV company TeleCommunications Inc, which in December 1993 bought a 60 per cent stake in [[Flextech]] and put the company in control of its UK cable channels. <ref>Jeff Ferry, 'Flextech's profitless prosperity', ''Director'', August 1994; p.28</ref> (After Veljanovski's departure Flextech entered into a 50 per cent joint venture with BBC Worldwide called UKTV. Eventually [[Flextech]] was merged with Telewest and then Virgin Media.)
  
 
===Case Associates===
 
===Case Associates===
In 1996 Veljanovski founded the 'competition consultancy' [[Case Associates]]. That year Veljanovski authored a report for the [[European Media Forum]] arguing that Channel 4 should be privitised. According to the ''Daily Mail'', Veljanovski argued in the report that, 'full privatisation of Channel 4 would bring in $3billion, while a sell-off with the stipulation that it must keep its remit to cater for minority interests would still raise $2billion. <ref>Sean Poulter, 'Clarke can tune in to £3bn bonus', ''Daily Mail'', 21 November 1996; p.29</ref>
+
In 1996 Veljanovski founded the 'competition consultancy' [[Case Associates]]. That year Veljanovski authored a report for the [[European Media Forum]] arguing that Channel 4 should be privatised. According to the ''Daily Mail'', Veljanovski argued in the report that, 'full privatisation of Channel 4 would bring in $3billion, while a sell-off with the stipulation that it must keep its remit to cater for minority interests would still raise $2billion. <ref>Sean Poulter, 'Clarke can tune in to £3bn bonus', ''Daily Mail'', 21 November 1996; p.29</ref>
  
 
==Publications==
 
==Publications==

Latest revision as of 19:10, 20 October 2009

Cento Veljanovski

Dr Cento Gavril Veljanovski (born 19 February 1953) is a neoliberal economist and business consultant closely affiliated with the seminal free market think-tank the Institute of Economic Affairs as well as the European Policy Forum. He has authored a number of reports arguing for the privitisation and deregulation of the British media, as well as public utilities like gas and telecommunications.

Biography

Veljanovski was born in Australia [1] on 19 February 1953, the son of Gavril Veljanovski and Margaret née Wagenaar. He studied a degree and a masters in economics at Monash University (in 1975 and 1977 respectively[2]) and a PhD at Oxford. [3] He was a junior resident fellow at Wolfson College, Oxford from 1978 to 1984 during which time he was also a visiting professor at the Univiversity of Toronto (1980-1981). In 1984 he joined University College London (UCL) as a lecturer. [4]

Veljanovski was as an advisor to the Peacock Committee, which was set up by the Thatcher government to review the financing of the BBC. [5] The committee, which sat during 1985/6 was chaired by the economist Alan Peacock, who was a Trustee of the Institute of Economic Affairs.

Institute of Economic Affairs

In 1987, Veljanovski left UCL to join the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), where he was research and editorial director until 1991. [6] Veljanovski replaced the IEA's first editorial director Arthur Seldon, who was appointed to the post in June 1959 and along with Ralph Harris was one of the two major figures behind the organisation.

Veljanovski's major contribution to the moves to privitise and/or deregulate British broadcasting during this period was a book he edited for IEA called Freedom in Broadcasting. Published in 1989, Freedom in Broadcasting (which also happened to be the title of Rupert Murdoch's notorious MacTaggart Lecture that same year) included contributions from some of the major figures pushing for neoliberal reform of broadcasting including Samuel Brittan and Alan Peacock. [7]

Whilst at IEA, Veljanovski also acted as a consultant for and director at a number of corporations. In 1990 he was reported to be a director of the consultancy firm Putnam, Hayes and Bartlett. [8] He was also reportedly employed as a consultant to the BBC. [9] This was despite the fact that he was ideologically committed to abolishing public service broadcasting. That year he also joined the 'economic consultancy' corporation Lexecon, where he was a director until 1994.

Lobbying for Murdoch

In 1991 Veljanovski authored a report called 'The Media in Britain Today', published by Rupert Murdoch's News International. The report, which also included a foreword by Alan Peacock argued that, 'where there are 50 or more television channels, many with small audiences, the fact that a newspaper proprietor has a controlling interest in several satellite channels does not pose a real threat to diversity or to competition'. [10] Marketing magazine commented that, 'given that News International is sponsoring the report, its credibility may prove to be extremely limited in some quarters.' [11] The Times (also owned by Murdoch) commented that: 'Although his views are similar to those advocated by News International in its campaign to fight off further restrictions on ownership in more than one medium, Dr Veljanovski says he had a free brief when writing the book.' [12] The newspaper quoted Veljanovski as saying, 'I would not have put my name to anything that did not reflect my views of the industry. I don't think I have come up with conclusions comfortable to anyone.' [13]

Veljanovski has reportedly worked as a consultant to Foxtel, [14] an Australian pay television company part owned by News International.

Life after the IEA

Veljanovski left the IEA in 1991 (although he remains an IEA Fellow). From 1991 to 1994 he was an economic advisor to the Republic of Macedonia. [15] According to Euromoney, 'Veljanovski convinced Jacques Attali, president of the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, to provide Macedonia with urgently needed technical assistance for a privatisation programme', [16] which he then helped draw up. [17] The new privatisation law was, according to Euromoney, 'central to the crisis programme' and 'concentrated on the 1,450 key [socially-owned] enterprises at the core of the economy'. [18] The article continued:

Except for a few strategic industries, there will be no legal distinction between local and foreign investors. Miljovski [the Minister overseeing the programme] sees this as a way of countering potentially dangerous nationalistic policies, while Veljanovski shrugs off critics on the far left who are wary of opening the floodgates to foreign control: "It's not a case of ripping off Macedonia. The whole issue is that only foreign ownership will bring in new capital, new links to financial institutions, new know-how and management skills," he says. [19]

Euromoney reported that Veljanovski 'sees the speedy introduction of foreign banks as imperative to the realisation of his privatisation plans.' [20] In another article Euromoney reported that, 'When Veljanovski asked whether the Macedonian people feared foreign capital would exploit the country, he was told: "Come and exploit us. It can't be worse than what we have now!"' [21] As with elsewhere in the former Soviet Union, the privatisation process was highly corrupt and economic power simply passed to the old industrial managers with support from the state. Looking back on the privatisation process, the academic and one time Macedonian finance minister Trajko Slaveski wrote:

The method for privatisation of medium-sized and large enterprises that has been most favoured by the Privitisation Agency is a variant of a managment buyout... The managers of enterprises saw these developments as a sign that they could do whatever they wanted because the government had made a political decision that they were the "chosen" future owners. The press reported many abuses of the involuntary transfer of shares from workers to managers for a nominal price, even free, under threats, open or tacit, of firing those who opposed the "offer one cannot refuse." It is enough to mention that all of this has been happening in the country with the highest unemployment rate in Europe. [22]

In 1993 Veljanovski joined the board of the cable television programmer Flextech where he was a non-executive director until 1995. [23] Flextech, which was then Britain's second largest Pay-TV provider, started life as an oil services company. It first moved into media in 1989 when it purchased a stake in the cable television broadcaster The Children's Channel during a restructuring of the company. Another shareholder in The Children's Channel was the US cable TV company TeleCommunications Inc, which in December 1993 bought a 60 per cent stake in Flextech and put the company in control of its UK cable channels. [24] (After Veljanovski's departure Flextech entered into a 50 per cent joint venture with BBC Worldwide called UKTV. Eventually Flextech was merged with Telewest and then Virgin Media.)

Case Associates

In 1996 Veljanovski founded the 'competition consultancy' Case Associates. That year Veljanovski authored a report for the European Media Forum arguing that Channel 4 should be privatised. According to the Daily Mail, Veljanovski argued in the report that, 'full privatisation of Channel 4 would bring in $3billion, while a sell-off with the stipulation that it must keep its remit to cater for minority interests would still raise $2billion. [25]

Publications

Choice by Cable (1983), Selling the State - Privatisation in Britain (1987), Privatisation and Competition - A Market Prospectus (1989), Freedom in Broadcasting (1989), The Media in Britain Today (1990), Regulators and the Market (1991), Pay TV in Australia (1999), Economic Principles of Law (2006), Economics of Law (2006)

Affiliations

Annabel's, member [26]

Notes

  1. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', Euromoney, December 1992; p.22
  2. Monash University, 2009 alumni events - Presentation by prominent economist Dr Cento Veljanovski, [Accessed 15 October 2009]
  3. Debrett's People of Today (Debrett's Peerage Ltd, January 2009) [Accessed via KnowUK on 15 October 2009]
  4. Debrett's People of Today, Dr Cento Veljanovski [Accessed 15 October 2009]
  5. Tom O'Malley, Closedown?: The BBC and Government Broadcasting Policy 1979-92 (London: Pluto Press, 1994) p.18
  6. Debrett's People of Today, Dr Cento Veljanovski [Accessed 15 October 2009]
  7. Alan Peacock contributed two chapters: 'Competition in broadcasting' and 'The Peacock Report: some unanswered questions'. Samuel Brittan's chapter was called 'The future of public service broadcasting'.
  8. 'Cable forecasts "should be lower"', New Media Markets, 8 November 1990
  9. Georgina Henry, 'BBC defends job for Mandelson', Guardian, 3 October 1990; Melinda Wittstock, 'BBC defends Labour choice', The Times, 3 October 1990
  10. cited in Richard Evans, 'Cross-ownership of media 'no threat to competition', The Times, 18 January 1990
  11. Michael Kavanagh, 'News International lashes out at critics', Marketing, 18 January 1990
  12. Richard Evans, 'Cross-ownership of media "no threat to competition"', The Times, 18 January 1990
  13. Ibid.
  14. Jane Schulze, 'Is Oftel Taking the right approach to bottlenecks?', The Age, 9 July 1999; p.2
  15. Debrett's People of Today, Dr Cento Veljanovski [Accessed 15 October 2009]
  16. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', Euromoney, December 1992; p.22
  17. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Search for Prosperity', Euromoney, December 1992; p. 2
  18. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', Euromoney, December 1992; p.22
  19. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', Euromoney, December 1992; p.22
  20. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Banks Go Back to Basics', Euromoney, December 1992; p.18
  21. Ben Cohen & George Stamkoski, 'Market Releases New Energies', Euromoney, December 1992; p.22
  22. Trajko Slaveski, 'Privatization in the Republic of Macedonia: Five Years After', Eastern European Economics, Vol. 35, No. 1 (Jan. - Feb., 1997), pp. 31-51
  23. Debrett's People of Today, Dr Cento Veljanovski [Accessed 15 October 2009]
  24. Jeff Ferry, 'Flextech's profitless prosperity', Director, August 1994; p.28
  25. Sean Poulter, 'Clarke can tune in to £3bn bonus', Daily Mail, 21 November 1996; p.29
  26. Debrett's People of Today (Debrett's Peerage Ltd, January 2009) [Accessed via KnowUK on 15 October 2009]