Prof Richard Murphy

Professor of Practice in International Political Economy at City University, London


Professor Richard Murphy is a political economist and helped found the Tax Justice Network in 2003. As technical adviser to that group, he created country-by-country reporting, which is now in use for tax reporting around the world. He also promoted the study of the tax gap as a way of appraising risk in the economy, and this is the focus of much of his recent work. Now a professor at City, University of London, his ideas have been used by many politicians, including David Cameron, Caroline Lucas, Vince Cable and Jeremy Corbyn.

Richard was rated the ninth most influential person in worldwide tax by International Tax Review in 2017. He writes frequently about political and economic matters on his blog Tax Research UK and is the author of The Joy of Tax (2015). He tweets @RichardJMurphy and blogs at taxresearch.org.uk.

John Weeks – Obituaries and Tributes

” John Weeks was a rigorous and progressive academic economist, committed to good economic policy and political action; at the same time he was a very kind, supportive and loyal colleague and friend”

The 2020 Budget

The day following the 2020 budget, PEF interviewed five members of the PEF Council on the new budget and the changing economic direction of the United Kingdom. Here are the interviews in full.

Who’s Credible on Tax?

Richard Murphy, PEF Council member and member of the Green New Deal Group, weighs up the various party’s tax pledges in the General Election.

Should we abolish inheritance tax?

Richard Murphy, PEF Council member, looks at the implications of a recent proposal to scrap inheritance tax entirely and outlines a progressive alternative.

We need climate change accounting now

Richard Murphy, PEF Council Member, member of the Green New Deal Group and Director of the Corporate Accountability Network, writes for the PEF blog on the urgent need for sustainable accounting.

The Green New Deal: Building a secure future

Richard Murphy, one of the Green New Deal’s original co-authors, outlines how he would finance green transformation – and build a fair economy for all at the same time.

Five tax policies for a progressive government

“Any incoming progressive government will face massive social challenges. Leaving aside green issues, the biggest of these will be the income and wealth inequality that is crippling our society and leaving many in poverty.”

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