Honorific-Prefix: | The Right Honourable |
The Lord Barnett | |
Honorific-Suffix: | PC |
Office: | Chair of the Public Accounts Committee |
Term Start: | July 1979 |
Term End: | 9 June 1983 |
Predecessor: | Edward du Cann |
Successor: | Robert Sheldon |
Office1: | Shadow Chief Secretary to the Treasury |
Leader1: | James Callaghan |
Term Start1: | 4 May 1979 |
Term End1: | 14 July 1979 |
Office2: | Chief Secretary to the Treasury |
Primeminister2: | Harold Wilson James Callaghan |
Term Start2: | 5 March 1974 |
Term End2: | 4 May 1979 |
Predecessor2: | Tom Boardman |
Successor2: | John Biffen |
Office3: | Member of Parliament for Heywood and Royton |
Term Start3: | 15 October 1964 |
Term End3: | 9 June 1983 |
Predecessor3: | Tony Leavey |
Successor3: | Constituency Abolished |
Birth Date: | 14 October 1923 |
Birth Place: | Manchester, England |
Death Place: | Manchester, England |
Party: | Labour |
Joel Barnett, Baron Barnett, (14 October 1923 – 1 November 2014) was a Labour Party politician. As Chief Secretary to the Treasury in the late 1970s, he devised the Barnett Formula that allocates public spending in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.[1]
Barnett was born in Manchester, the son of Jewish tailor Louis and wife Ettie, and was educated at Badkindt Hebrew School and Manchester Central High School.[2] [3] He worked as an accountant. He was elected a councillor on Prestwich Borough Council 1956-1959 and was treasurer of Manchester Fabian Society. Barnett stood in Runcorn in 1959 without success. He was elected member of parliament for Heywood and Royton in 1964. He was a member of the Public Accounts Committee from January 1966.
Barnett served as Chief Secretary to the Treasury from 1974 to 1979, gaining a seat in the cabinet from 1977 onwards, and was Denis Healey's right-hand man in the Callaghan Government. During this time he oversaw the devising of what is known as the Barnett Formula by which public spending is apportioned between England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. He subsequently joked about the strange and unexpected form of immortality that was accorded to him by "having his own formula". Following the Scotland Act 1998 and devolution, he argued that the Formula was unfair to England and should be abandoned or revised.[4] He reiterated this view in 2014 shortly before the Scottish independence referendum, calling the Formula unsustainable and saying it had become an embarrassment.[5]
Barnett held the Chairmanship of the Public Accounts Committee from 1979 to 1983. He published a memoir Inside the Treasury in 1982, describing his experience as chief secretary.[6] Barnett's Commons seat having been abolished by boundary changes, he was created a life peer as Baron Barnett, of Heywood and Royton in Greater Manchester on 30 September 1983. He served on select committees in the House of Lords including the European Union Committee, the Economic Affairs Committee and the Monetary Policy Committee of the Bank of England. He was appointed vice-chairman of the Board of Governors of the BBC by Conservative Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1986 and held the post until 1993, during which period he partook in the private meeting when Chairman Marmaduke Hussey told Director-General Alasdair Milne he would have to leave the BBC.[7] He died on 1 November 2014, aged 91.
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