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Panel Speakers - IESE Blog Community - IESE Business School

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<strong>Panel</strong> <strong>Speakers</strong><br />

Malcolm Hayday – CEO, Charity Bank<br />

Malcolm Hayday, FRSA, is the Chief Executive of The Charity Bank Limited, the<br />

UK’s first general charity to be authorized as a bank. He was previously the Director<br />

of <strong>Community</strong> Finance at CAF (Charities Aid Foundation) and Director of<br />

CAF’s social investment loan fund, Investors in Society. He is a Board Member of INAISE, the International<br />

Association of Investors in the Social Economy, a global network of social investment institutions, having<br />

served as its President in 1997-2001. He was a Trustee of The Big Issue Foundation in 2000-2007 and<br />

was elected its Chairman in 2003. From 2002 to 2003 he was a founding Board member of the <strong>Community</strong><br />

Development Finance Association (CDFA). He was also a member of the Advisory Group of global foundation<br />

leaders to the World Economic Forum. Malcolm is a member of the International Advisory Committee of<br />

NESsT, the non-profit enterprise and self-sustainability team, and the Advisory Group for NCVO’s Sustainable<br />

Funding Project. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society for the Arts. Malcolm has more than 30 years of<br />

experience in business finance. He graduated from Exeter University in 1972 with a BA Hons. in Economics.<br />

After university, he assumed progressively senior positions with City financial institutions. From 1987 he<br />

concentrated on finance for small and medium sized businesses. He joined CAF in 1993 to establish the<br />

loans service for charities. He was a member of the advisory group to the Small is Bankable report from the<br />

Joseph Rowntree Foundation (1998); the advisory group to the Development Trusts Association on asset<br />

based development (1998-9); the SEEDA social capital fund study group (2000); and the working group<br />

on social investment in Scotland which led to the development of Social Investment Scotland. He was also<br />

a member of the Arts Council of England national steering group on new financial instruments.<br />

70 <strong>IESE</strong> <strong>Business</strong> <strong>School</strong>

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