Harry Broadman
Managing Director, Chief Economist and Leader of the Emerging Markets, Governance and International Investment & Trade Practice Group, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC)
Dr. Harry G. Broadman is Managing Director at PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC). He serves as PwC's Chief Economist and Leader of the Emerging Markets, Governance and International Investment & Trade Practice Group.
Dr. Broadman is globally recognized as an expert practitioner, seasoned policy‐maker, transactional negotiator, and thought‐leader on corporate and public sector governance and anti‐corruption strategies, compliance and reform; anti-trust, competition policy and utility regulation; privatization and enterprise restructuring; and foreign investment and international trade. His career has focused on this set of issues intensively over the past 30 years, working in the private sector, international financial institutions, government, think tanks, and academia. In addition to Dr. Broadman's extensive work throughout the advanced countries, his professional experience on these issues spans all key emerging markets, especially China, Russia, India, Eastern Europe, Central Asia, the Balkans, sub-Saharan Africa, Vietnam, Thailand, and Mongolia.
Immediately prior to coming to PwC, Dr. Broadman was Managing Director at The Albright Group LLC, which subsequently became Albright Stonebridge Group LLC, a global consultancy co-chaired by former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and National Security Advisor Sandy Berger. He was also Chief Economist of Albright Capital Management LLC, an international emerging markets investment management firm. Both companies are based in Washington, DC. Dr. Broadman headed two practices, one that concentrated on governance, anti-corruption and development, and one that focused on Africa and South-South investment and trade.
Earlier, Dr. Broadman was a senior official at the World Bank Group and worked in three regions: in China; the Balkans and throughout all the former Soviet Union, including as Lead Economist for Russia prior to, during and after that country's economic crisis in the late 1990s; and Sub-Saharan Africa, his last position as Economic Advisor for the Africa Region.
Before coming to the Bank, he served in the Executive Office of the President as Assistant United States Trade Representative, where he oversaw all global and regional trade and investment negotiations in the services sectors—from aviation to finance to telecoms to shipping—as well as all negotiations on foreign direct investment provisions during the creation of the WTO. He was also responsible for negotiation of all US Bilateral Investment Treaties and he sat on the Board of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC). In this position he also sat on the White House Committee on Foreign Investment in the US (CFIUS).



