Background
Douglas Chalmers Hague was born in Bramley, Leeds, to Laurence Hague, a municipal clerk and Marion.
Douglas Chalmers Hague was born in Bramley, Leeds, to Laurence Hague, a municipal clerk and Marion.
Hague was educated at Moseley Grammar School (now Moseley School) and King Edward"s School, Birmingham, and took a bachelor of commerce degree at Birmingham University.
The family moved to Birmingham when he was three years old. He moved to be the Newton Chambers Professor of Economics at the University of Sheffield at the young age of 30, 1957-1963. Whilst at Sheffield, Hague also spent a year as visiting professor at Duke University, North Carolina, from 1960-1961.
This led to one or two summer schools for business people in Sheffield.
Subsequently, Hague became Professor of Applied Economics at the University of Manchester 1963-1965, and Professor of Managerial Economics at the Manchester Business School which he helped to set up, 1965-1981. During this time in the mid 1970s, Hague was also a member and later deputy chairman of the Prices Commission from 1973 to 1978.
With Norman Strauss he set up a strategic leadership programme at Templeton College, Oxford, and taught there from 1982 to 1997. At the same time he was chairman or director of various companies.
Later, Hague became passionate about entrepreneurship and spin off businesses from universities and classed himself as a "knowledge angel".
He wrote a book about this with Christine Holmes. He was associated with the Entrepreneurship Centre at the Said Business School in Oxford from its inception in 2002. One of Hague"s first books, A Textbook of Economic Theory, brought him to the attention of Margaret Thatcher (later Lady Thatcher) and he joined the Number.
10 Policy Unit under Sir John Hoskyns.
He was chairman of the Economic and Social Research Council 1983-1987. Hague was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 1978 and knighted in the 1982 New Year Honours "for Political and Public Service.".
He was assistant lecturer, then lecturer, then Reader in Political Economy at University College, London, 1947-1957. During this time, Sheffield University granted him limited funds to visit American Business Schools with a view to setting up a similar operation in Sheffield.