Philip Stephens (born 2 June 1953)[1] is an English journalist and author.
Biography
editPhilip Stephens is associate editor, chief political commentator, and director of the editorial board of the Financial Times. He writes a weekly column for the FT. He was educated at Wimbledon College and at Oxford University, where he took an honours degree in modern history. He joined Reuters as a correspondent in London and Brussels before moving to the Financial Times newspaper in 1983. There he has worked as economics editor, political editor and editor of the UK edition.[1]
He is Vice-Chair of the Trustees of the Ditchley Foundation[1] and member of the board of the Franco-British Colloque. He has won several journalism prizes, including Political Journalist of the Year in the British press awards, The David Watt prize, and the Political Studies Association Political Journalist of the Year.[1] He wrote the book Politics and the Pound, a study of the management of exchange rates by the British Government, and its relations with Europe since 1979.[2] He also wrote a biography of Tony Blair, when the latter was British Prime Minister.[3]
References
edit- ^ a b c d STEPHENS, Philip Francis Christopher, Who's Who 2015, A & C Black, 2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014
- ^ Stephens, Philip, Politics and the pound: the Conservatives' struggle with sterling, Macmillan, 1996, second edition Politics and the Pound: The Tories, the Economy and Europe, Papermac, 1997, ISBN 0333632974
- ^ Stephens, Philip, Tony Blair: The Price of Leadership, Politico's, 2004, ISBN 1842751174
External links
edit- Financial Times biography; accessed 22 September 2014