Early and private life McWilliams was born in
Dún Laoghaire in 1966 and was raised in Windsor Park,
Monkstown, Dublin. His father worked in a chemical and paint factory. His Cork-born mother was a teacher. He is married to Sian Smyth, a former corporate lawyer, who is from near
Belfast. They live in Dublin.
Education McWilliams attended
Blackrock College in Dublin. He then graduated from
Trinity College Dublin, with a degree in economics and social science in 1988. His Masters in economics is from the
College of Europe,
Belgium (1989).
Early career: 1990s Between 1990 and 1993 he worked as an economist at the
Central Bank of Ireland, a period which covered
German reunification, the
Maastricht Treaty,
Bertie Ahern's term as
Minister for Finance and
Black Wednesday. Watching these phenomena unfold from the perspective of a Central Bank official shaped his opinions, and these events would be revisited in his writings, especially the triangular relationship between access to credit in Ireland, the retirement funds of an ageing German workforce, and European monetary policy.
Move to London: Early warnings about Celtic Tiger McWilliams moved to London to work at
UBS as a senior European economist and head of Emerging Markets research for Banque Nationale de Paris. He was one of the economists at the time who popularised the phrase "
Celtic Tiger" in an analysis that compared the Republic of Ireland to the
Tiger economies of Asia, predicting threefold growth per annum in the Irish market in the years 1995–2000. He credited what he described as "an economic miracle" to spending cuts by
Charles Haughey's 1987 government, "which laid the foundations for the impressive growth in the 1990s". During this time he was identified as an outlier among economists interested in Ireland in warning that the housing market in the Republic was running a
price bubble similar to that of the housing markets in
Boston in the 1980s and
Thailand in the early 1990s. In 1996 he predicted a recession by 2005, noting that EMU meant that Ireland would enjoy low interest rates tailored to European neighbours with far lower economic growth than Ireland. In 1998 he specified that in the event of a world recession, Irish house prices would drop by 20%. and predicted a crash by the year 2000. In
2000 – the year he had previously predicted that the Celtic Tiger would end - During
2001 Ireland experienced a foot and mouth outbreak which had an impact on the economy, with some commentators declaring the Celtic Tiger to be dead. However, when the impact to the economy turned out to be less negative than anticipated, his critics dismissed his analysis of the fragile Irish economy as alarmist.
2000s: Writing and broadcasting Since returning to work in Ireland, he presented a current affairs programme called
Agenda on
TV3, a breakfast radio show on
NewsTalk 106 from 2002 to 2004 and a topical afternoon discussion programme called
The Big Bite on the television station
RTÉ One. All these shows were cancelled after relatively short runs. However, in 2005 McWilliams published his first book,
The Pope's Children, which became a significant bestseller and firmly established his place as a household name in Ireland, and imitated on the satire TV show
Irish Pictorial Weekly. In ''The Pope's Children
, McWilliams applied ideas which he saw used with great effect in Bobos in Paradise: The New Upper Class and How They Got There by American conservative writer David Brooks to Ireland, creating neologisms to describe certain economic actors as stock characters – HiCo and Breakfast Roll Man, for example. He wrote three more bestsellers: The Generation Game
, Follow the Money
and The Good Room''.
Post 2008 After the
2008 financial crisis, McWilliams was seen as having been finally proven right by many and became a more prominent presence in the Irish media. He wrote and presented documentaries in Ireland and
Australia, mostly on economics topics but also exploring the Republic of Ireland's relationship with Britain and contributing to
RTÉ's
Ireland's Greatest series, arguing on behalf of
President Mary Robinson. In 2010, he staged "Outsiders" a part stand up, part discussion, part social observation at the
Abbey Theatre, Dublin. McWilliams hosted
Leviathan: Political Cabaret, a live discussion, political cabaret and satire event which featured at the
Electric Picnic festival every year from 2005 to 2013. ;Kilkenomics & Dalkey Book Festival In 2010, McWilliams co-founded two annual events: the Dalkey Book Festival with his wife, Sian, and Kilkenomics a festival-style conference which combines economics with standup comedy. McWilliams has worked with another way of looking at current events in economics using his Punk Economics Series of animated videos published on YouTube and also uses animations, music and video in his online economics course Economics without Boundaries. ;Global Irish Forum McWilliams conceived
The Global Irish Forum, an event modelled on the
World Economic Forum in
Switzerland and inspired in part by
Israel's social and economic ties to Jewish communities in trading partner nations (he has frequently referred to harnessing the power of a 'Global Tribe' ). It is an event where businesses and leaders, both at home and abroad can work together and contribute to Ireland's economic recovery, and to examine ways in which Ireland and its global community could develop a more strategic relationship with each other, particularly in the economic sector. ;Podcast (2019-) Following an appearance on a live episode of
The Blindboy Podcast, McWilliams decided to launch his own weekly podcast in 2019. == Political and economic views ==