After various academic roles, he became senior economic advisor to
HM Treasury between 1970 and 1974. Alan Budd was featured in
Adam Curtis's 1992 documentary
Pandora's Box, in which he was being interviewed about his time as economic advisor to the treasury. From 1979 to 1981 he was Special Adviser at the Treasury in
Margaret Thatcher's government. Reflecting on his position during this time, Budd expressed concerns that the policies that were implemented to allegedly reduce inflation might, in fact, have had a hidden agenda. In a documentary interview, Budd postulated that Thatcher's actual goal might have been to deliberately raise unemployment in order to reduce the strength of the working classes and re-create a
reserve army of labour to allow capitalists to make high profits. During the 1980s he was a professor of economics and director of the Centre for Economic Forecasting at the
London Business School. Other appointments have included group economic adviser,
Barclays Bank (1989–91), and membership of the advisory board for Research Councils (1990–91). Between 1991 and 1997, he was chief economic adviser to the Treasury, and headed the government economic service. Among his activities as an economist, he was a governor of the
National Institute for Economic and Social Research; a founder member of the UK-Japan
21st Century Group; an executive editor of
World Economics and a member of the editorial advisory board of the
Oxford Review of Economic Policy. He was also a senior adviser to
Credit Suisse First Boston and a consultant to the
G8 Group. In 2005, he was appointed to the board of the
IG Group, a
spread betting firm founded by
Stuart Wheeler. ==Public profile==