Lionel Barber (born 18 January 1955)[1] is an English journalist. He was editor of the Financial Times (FT) from 2005 to 2020. Barber worked at The Scotsman and The Sunday Times before working at the FT from the mid-1980s.
Barber was a well-regarded editor of the FT. He was credited with raising its journalistic standards, transforming it into a global brand, navigating its transition into the digital era, growing readership, and managing its takeover by
Nikkei.[2]
Early life and career
Barber was born on 18 January 1955 to a journalist father.[3] He was educated at
Dulwich College, an independent school for boys in
Dulwich in
South London, and at
St Edmund Hall, Oxford, graduating in 1978 with an
upper second[4] joint honours degree in German and modern history. He worked for a company in Germany as an interpreter, before being offered a job on the Thomson regional training scheme.[5]
Barber began his career in journalism in 1978 as a reporter for The Scotsman. In 1981, after being named Young Journalist of the Year in the
British Press Awards, he became a business correspondent at The Sunday Times,[6] having been interviewed by its editor
Frank Giles.
By 1982 he was the Enterprising Britain correspondent (a title used to denote the position that became known as industrial correspondent).[4] The co-writer of several books, his works include a history of
Reuters news agency (The Price of Truth, 1985) and the
Westland affair (Not with Honour, 1986).
At the Financial Times
Barber joined the Financial Times in 1985.[5] His positions at the paper included Washington correspondent and US editor (1986–1992),
Brussels bureau chief (1992–1998), and news editor (1998–2000). He was formerly the editor of the FT Continental European edition (2000–2002), during which he briefed US President
George W. Bush ahead of his first trip to Europe.
In July 2012, Barber was accused of intimidating and threatening a member of staff at the Financial Times. Steve Lodge, who worked as a personal finance writer at the newspaper, was brought before a disciplinary panel following an incident in which the Financial Times claimed demonstrated he "had a problem working for women". Barber was accused of "losing his temper and raising his voice" in a manner that breached the newspaper's procedures.[9]
In October 2018, he said it was "time for a revolution" at the newspaper after sharing a reader's letter that criticised it for a "lack of diversity" among its columnists.[10] Barber stepped down from the role on 17 January 2020 after 14 years as editor, and was succeeded by
Roula Khalaf.[11] Barber's 14 year tenure made him the second longest-serving editor in the FT's history, after
Sir Gordon Newton.[4]
In 2019, Barber received pay and pension benefits worth £1.92 million, according to accounts published at Companies House.[12] This led to a halt in pay negotiations.
After the Financial Times
In 2020, Barber began presenting What Next?, an interview podcast for
LBC.[13]
Barber published a memoir covering his editorship of the FT in 2020, entitled The Powerful and the Damned: Private Diaries in Turbulent Times.[14][15]
Barber has received a number of awards and distinctions for his journalistic work.[17]
In 1981, he was named Young Journalist of the Year in the
British Press Awards. In 1998, he was named one of the 101 most influential Europeans by
Le Nouvel Observateur.
In 2009, Barber was awarded the St George Society medal of honour for his contribution to journalism in the transatlantic community. In February 2011, he was appointed to the board of trustees at
The Tate. He also serves on the board of trustees of the
Carnegie Corporation of New York.[18]
In 2016, he was made a Chevalier (knight) in the French
Ordre National de la Légion d'Honneur for his "contribution to high-quality journalism, and the Financial Times' positive role in the European debate".[19]
Barber's wife, Victoria Greenwood, is a criminologist.[21] Barber has a daughter and a son, born in Washington, D.C. in 1988 and 1990.[22] As of 2008[update], he lives in London.[3] He is fluent in
French and
German.[3]
Bibliography
Ralph Lawrenson, John; Barber, Lionel (1985). The Price of Truth: The Story of the Reuters £££ Millions. Mainstream Publishing.
ISBN9780722154878.
Barber, Lionel (1998). Britain and the New European Agenda. Centre for European Reform.
ISBN9781901229073.
Bilefsky, Dan; Hall, Ben; Barber, Lionel, eds. (1998). The Birth of the Euro: The Financial Times's Guide to EMU. Penguin.
ISBN0140280022.
Barber, Lionel, ed. (2013). Lunch with the FT: 52 Classic Interviews. Penguin.
ISBN9781591846499.
Barber, Lionel, ed. (2019). Lunch with the FT: A Second Helping. Penguin Books.
ISBN9780241400715.