In this Catalan name, the first or paternal surname is Gay de Liébana and the second or maternal family name is Saludas; both are generally joined by the conjunction "i".
José María Gay de Liébana y Saludas (Catalan: Josep Maria Gay de Liébana i Saludas; 6 May 1953 – 16 July 2021) was a Spanish economist, lawyer, and university professor, popular as an economic commentator on several television programs.
In 1979 Gay de Liébana founded the firm "J.M. Gay & Cia" specialized in tax, business, and legal advice and consultancy.[3] From 1981 he was professor of financial economics and accounting at the University of Barcelona.[4] Between 2004 and 2006 he was member of the RCD Espanyol Board of Directors.[5]
Gay de Liébana rose to fame during the Great Recession, during which he earned in 2012 the nickname of the "outraged economist" for his denunciation and fierce criticism of the responses to the crisis, defending the liberal postulates characteristic of supply-side economics.[3][5] Previously, in 2011, he participated in an episode of the program Salvados, with Jordi Évole [es], in which he spoke about the finances of professional soccer clubs.[5]
Gay de Liébana was a regular contributor to the program La Sexta Noche, broadcast on the channel La Sexta, in which he gave practical lessons in economics.[6] Among them was the memorable appearance in 2012, where he explained what the rumored bailout of Spain could mean.[7]
Since 2016 Gay de Liébana had been collaborating in the radio program, Herrera en COPE, on the COPE radio channel.[1] He also collaborated, albeit on a more ad hoc basis, on programs on channels such as TV3, 8TV, Catalunya Ràdio, RAC 1.[5]
Gay de Liébana also worked as an expert, being so in the corruption scandal called Caso Palau-Millet [es] in 2017.[9] In the judgment of the case in 2018, the court criticized Gay de Liébana's expertise, indicating that he affirmed some accusations without sufficient evidence and that he would have made some "manifestly improvable" calculation.[10]
Personal life and death
Gay de Liébana married María Mercedes, with whom he had his only son, Pepe.[3]
Gay de Liébana rarely gave his opinion on politics, but he identified himself as a non-independent Catalan who considered it a "heroic" act, and was a strong critic of the political class, whom he considered thieves and that it was necessary to "clean and sanitize" them. He was also a big fan of football team RCD Espanyol.[11]
Gay de Liébana announced in 2018 he was suffering from kidney cancer which had metastasised in the body.[12] He died on 16 July 2021 in his hometown at the age of 68.[3] His last media appearance was on the day of his death, in a video recorded days before for La Vanguardia, explaining the capital flight in Spain.[13] On the same day, an opinion article of his was also published in El Economista entitled ¿Qué fue del 20/20?.[14]
Works
España se escribe con E de endeudamiento. Grupo Planeta. 2012.[15]
¿Dónde estamos?: verdades, mentiras y deberes pendientes de la recuperación económica. Grupo Planeta. 2015.[15]
La gran burbuja del fútbol: Los modelos de negocio que oculta el deporte más importante del mundo. Penguin Random House Grupo Editorial España. 2016.[15]
Revolución tecnológica y nueva economía. Deusto. 2020.[16]
Adelante, solo existe el futuro y es nuestro. Aguilar. 2020.[17]