Sayers was appointed as assistant lecturer at the
London School of Economics (LSE) in 1931 after completing his postgraduate studies at Cambridge University. He remained at LSE until 1935, when he became a lecturer at
Oxford University, being made a fellow of
Pembroke College in 1939. In 1957 Sayers was appointed to the Committee on the Working of the Monetary System, i.e.
The Radcliffe Report, where he examined most witnesses and drafted key section of the committee's official report. However, Sayers grew to be bitterly disappointed with the report's reception after it was published in 1959. In addition to his academic work, Sayers was an editorial adviser of the
Three Banks Review 1948–1968; it took its name from the original publishers,
Royal Bank of Scotland with Williams, Deacon's Bank Limited and Glyn, Mills & Co., of the Three Banks Group. He was also associated with
Economica. He was made a fellow of the
British Academy in 1957 and held its vice presidency in 1966–67, and then worked from 1969 to 1974 as its publications secretary. ==Works==