Sydney Caine
Sir Sydney Caine KCMG (27 June 1902 – 2 January 1991) was an educator and economist. Early lifeOn 27 June 1902, Caine was born. Caine's father was Harry Caine, a railway clerk. Caine's mother was Jane. Caine attended Harrow County School in London, England.[1] EducationIn 1922, Caine graduated with a first class degree, specialising in Economic History from London School of Economics.[1] CareerCaine started his career as an assistant inspector of taxes. In 1926, Caine joined the Colonial Office, where he served as secretary to the West Indian Sugar Commission and to the UK Sugar Industry Commission.[1] In 1937, Caine was appointed as the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong, until 1940.[1] He proposed the imposition of new water charging system amid the construction of Shing Mun Reservoir and income tax.[2] Between 1952 and 1957 he was the vice-chancellor of the University of Malaya in Singapore. Caine was appointed the director of the LSE between 1957 and 1967. He was an alumnus of the LSE, and, before his appointment as director of the school, he was a well-known economist who had acted as a consultant for the World Bank for a period of time and had worked as a diplomat, being appointed minister at the British Embassy in Washington, US. Between 1963 and 1970 he was the chairman of the governing board of the UNESCO International Institute for Educational Planning. Personal lifeIn 1925, Caine married Muriel Ann Harris. Their son, Michael, was born in 1927. His wife died in 1962.[1][3] Caine married secondly, in 1965, Doris Winifred Folkard (died 1973). He married, thirdly, in 1975, Elizabeth Bowyer (died 1996).[1] On 2 January 1991, aged 88, Sir Sydney Caine died.[1] Legacy
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