Michael Barber | |
Honorific Prefix: | Sir |
Birth Date: | 1955 11, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Liverpool, Lancashire,[1] England |
Nationality: | British |
Occupation: | Educationist Chancellor of the University of Exeter Chairman of Somerset County Cricket Club |
Known For: | Founder and chairman of Delivery Associates |
Sir Michael Bayldon Barber (born 24 November 1955[2]) is a British former public servant and educationist known for serving as Head of the Prime Minister's Delivery Unit under Tony Blair’s government. He was knighted in 2005 for his contributions.[3] He is the founder and chairman of Delivery Associates,[4] a global advisory firm.[5] [6]
He has advised governments in over 60 countries on issues of public policy and delivery. He was the founder and first head of the Prime Minister's Delivery Unit under Prime Minister Tony Blair, and later served as Chief Education Advisor at Pearson,[7] and as a partner at McKinsey, where he was head of the global education practice. He served as Co-Chair of Boston Consulting Group's not-for-profit foundation and the Centre for Public Impact.[8]
Barber published How to Run a Government: So that Citizens Benefit and Taxpayers Don’t go Crazy in 2015, and his latest book, Accomplishment - How to achieve ambitious and challenging things,[9] was published by Penguin in 2021.
In 2021, he was asked by the UK Prime Minister and Cabinet Secretary to conduct a review of government delivery after COVID-19.[10] In January 2022, Barber was appointed Chancellor of the University of Exeter.[11] In April 2022, Barber was announced as the new chairman of Somerset County Cricket Club.[12]
Barber was born in Liverpool and educated at Bootham School[13] in York. He studied history at the University of Oxford. He taught in schools in Britain and Zimbabwe.
Barber worked in the education department of the National Union of Teachers. As a member of the Labour Party, he was elected to the council of the London Borough of Hackney, becoming chair of the education committee. In 1987, he contested for Labour the seat of Henley, then held by Michael Heseltine.[14]
Barber served as Chief Adviser to the Secretary of State for Education on School Standards during the first term of British Prime Minister Tony Blair, from 1997 to 2001.[7]
During Blair's second term, from 2001 to 2005, Barber served as the Chief Adviser on Delivery, reporting directly to Prime Minister Tony Blair.[7] As head of the Prime Minister's Delivery Unit (PMDU),[15] he wrote a book about his experience at the PMDU. Instruction to Deliver: Fighting to Reform Britain’s Public Services (Methuen 2008),[16] It was described by the Financial Times as "one of the best books about British Government for many years".[15]
Barber was appointed as the first ever Chair of the Office for Students (OfS), the regulator for higher education in the UK established in 2018, until he stepped down in March 2021.[17]
Barber is the founder and chairman of Delivery Associates, a global advisory firm.
Barber has served as the co-chair of the Pakistan Education Taskforce as DFID Special Representative on Education for Pakistan, which led to the development of the "Punjab Roadmap", with stated goals of increasing the quality of education at 60,000 schools in Punjab. The Good News from Pakistan, published in 2013 with Reform, summarises the change between August 2011 and January 2013.[18]
The Independent Commission on Aid Impact has praised the Roadmap as "an excellent example of how a well-designed monitoring system can be integral to the design of a reform programme".[19]
Barber also advised Dr Sania Nishtar, the Special Assistant to the Pakistan Prime Minister on Social Protection and Poverty Alleviation, on the Ehsaas Programme in Pakistan.[20]
Barber was asked by the UK Treasury in 2017 to conduct a review into how government measures impact each taxpayer pound spent on public services. The Public Value Review[21] sets out the approach.[22]
In 2021, Barber was asked by the Prime Minister and the Cabinet Secretary to review government delivery after COVID-19.[23]
In November 2022, British Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt announced that Barber would serve in an advisory role on the government's skills reform programme.[24]
Barber served as partner and head of McKinsey's Global Education Practice until 2011. Barber published Deliverology 101[25] in 2011 to serve as a comprehensive guide to system reform and delivery. While at McKinsey, Barber co-authored How the world’s most improved school systems keep getting better (2010)[26] and How the world’s best-performing schools come out on top (2007).[27]
In the summer of 2010, Barber teamed with the Education Trust and Achieve to found the U.S. Education Delivery Institute. In 2010–2016, this institute worked with leaders of K–12 and higher education in the United States.[28]
Barber has been a Distinguished Visiting Fellow at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Harvard Graduate School of Education and is an Honorary Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford.[29] He was awarded honorary doctorates from the University of Exeter and Nottingham Trent University.[30]