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Former chair of Hodge Bank and Eversheds Keith James has died

One of the most respected figures in the Welsh business community he also created the vision for the IWA and served on the board of Admiral

Business leaders have paid tribute to Keith James following his death aged 78.

One of the most respected and influential figures in the Welsh business community, Keith James, has died after a short illness aged 78.

His impressive career saw him becoming chair of legal firm Eversheds in 1995 (now Eversheds Sutherland) where he oversaw impressive growth both in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and internationally. Other prominent roles included chairing the only headquartered commercial bank in Wales, Hodge.

With a first class intellect he was a hugely effective operator around the corporate boardroom, while remaining a self-effacing man at heart noted for his warmth, empathy and supportive nature towards colleagues and friends.

Educated at Cowbridge Grammar School, Cardiff High School for Boys and West Monmouth School, after graduating in law from Queens’ College, Cambridge, he started his legal career in Cardiff in 1967 with Phillips & Buck.

With an acute legal mind and flair for business he quickly progressed and was made a partner two years later, having built up an impressive corporate client base drawn from South Wales and beyond. This included acting for financier Sir Julian Hodge and his family - a professional relationship that would span 50 years. He retired as a partner from Eversheds in 2004.

Against the back of de-industrialisation and the onset of the dismantling of what had been the backbone of the Welsh economy for over a century, in steel and coal, in 1986 he co-authored a seminal paper with Geraint Talfan Davies, then at HTV Wales.

This set out a vision for an independent body that could provide an informed counter to prevailing thinking on all aspects of Welsh life, including critically its economy.

A year later the non-political Institute of Welsh Affairs, now called the IWA, was established with Mr James serving as a board member for more than a decade. Today it remains an important ‘critical friend’ of decision makers, while providing new thinking on economic and societal issues.