John Kingman (businessman)
Sir John Oliver Frank Kingman KCB FRS Hon FMedSci (born 24 April 1969) has been Chair of Legal & General PLC since 2016. He is also Chair of Barclays UK, the ring-fenced retail bank of Barclays PLC, and a member of the Barclays PLC board.
He is Deputy Chair (and twice served as Acting Chair) of the National Gallery.
He is a former Second Permanent Secretary to HM Treasury.
From 2016-21, he was the first Chair of UK Research and Innovation, which oversees Government science and innovation funding of about £8bn a year. He was elected an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society in 2021, "for his unwavering support for science throughout his career".[citation needed]. He is also an Honorary Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences.
In 2018, he undertook a highly critical review of the Financial Reporting Council, recommending wholesale reform of the FRC and ending self-regulation of the major audit firms.[1]
He is a member of the UK Government’s Industrial Strategy Advisory Council.
Education
[edit]He was a Queen’s Scholar at Westminster School, and a Casberd Scholar at St John's College, Oxford, where he took a 1st class degree in Modern History; he is now an Honorary Fellow.
Career
[edit]Early in his career (1995-97) Kingman was a Financial Times Lex columnist. He also worked in the Chief Executive's office at BP, 1997-98.
Kingman was closely involved with the response to the 2007-09 financial crisis. He handled nationalisation of Northern Rock, and led negotiations with RBS, Lloyds and HBOS on their £37bn recapitalisation. He was the first chief executive of UK Financial Investments, which managed the Government's bank shareholdings.[2][3]
Whilst at the Treasury, Kingman was responsible for selling £16bn of Lloyds shares, the first RBS share sale, and the largest-ever UK privatisation (£13bn of mortgage assets). Kingman led on liberalising the annuity market and creating the National Infrastructure Commission; he negotiated Greater Manchester's devolution deal, introducing an elected Mayor. Earlier, he was responsible for a fundamental overhaul of the UK competition regime (2001 Enterprise Act), and introducing the Highly Skilled Migrants’ Programme. He was particularly involved with science funding, working on five spending reviews which prioritised science and in 2004 leading the cross-Government 10 year science and innovation framework. From 2003-06, he was a board Director of the European Investment Bank.
From 2010-2012, Kingman was Global co-head of the Financial Institutions Group at Rothschild.
Affiliations
[edit]Kingman is a World Fellow of Yale University and a Visiting Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford. He was a Trustee of the Royal Opera House, 2014-21, and has been a member of the Prime Minister's Council for Science and Technology, the Trilateral Commission, the Global Advisory Committee for the Centre for Corporate Reputation at Oxford University, and the Development Board for the £37m renewal of St-Martin-in-the-Fields. He chaired the judges for the 2017 Wolfson Economics Prize.
Personal life
[edit]Kingman is the son of the mathematician Sir John Frank Charles Kingman FRS.
His partner is Diana Gerald MBE, CEO of the charity BookTrust. They live in central London with their daughter.
References
[edit]- ^ "UK audit watchdog to be replaced by new governing body". BBC News. BBC. 11 March 2019. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
- ^ A & C Black (2016). KINGMAN, John Oliver Frank (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 2 March 2016.
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ignored (help) - ^ Government announcement Archived 4 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine