Chancellor Of The Exchequer

Roles and responsibilities

A previous Chancellor, Robert Lowe, described the office in the following terms in the House of Commons, on 11 April 1870: “The Chancellor of the Exchequer is a man whose duties make him more or less of a taxing machine. He is entrusted with a certain amount of misery which it is his duty to distribute as fairly as he can.”

Fiscal policy

The Chancellor has considerable control over other departments as it is the Treasury which sets departmental expenditure limits. The amount of power this gives to an individual Chancellor depends on his personal forcefulness, his status with his party and his relationship with the Prime Minister. Gordon Brown, who became Chancellor when Labour came into Government in 1997, had a large personal power base in the party. Perhaps as a result, Tony Blair chose to keep him in his job throughout his ten years as Prime Minister; making Brown an unusually dominant figure and the longest serving Chancellor since the Reform Act of 1832. This situation has strengthened a pre-existing trend towards the Chancellorship moving into a clear second among government offices, elevated above its traditional peers, the Foreign Secretaryship and Home Secretaryship.

One part of the Chancellor’s key roles involves the framing of the annual Budget, which is summarised in a speech to the House of Commons. Traditionally the budget speech was delivered on Budget Day, a Tuesday (although not always) in March, as Britain’s tax year follows the Julian Calendar. From 1993, the Budget was preceded by an annual ‘Autumn Statement’, now called the Pre-Budget Report, which forecasts government spending in the next year and usually takes place in November or December. This preview of the next year’s Budget is also referred to as the “mini-Budget”. The 1997, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2006, 2007 and 2008 Budgets were all delivered on a Wednesday.

Monetary policy

Although the Bank of England is responsible for setting interest rates, the Chancellor also plays an important part in the monetary policy structure. He sets the inflation target which the Bank must set interest rates to meet. Under the Bank of England Act 1998 the Chancellor has the power of appointment of four out of nine members of the Bank’s Monetary Policy Committee – the so-called ‘external’ members. He also has a high level of influence over the appointment of the Bank’s Governor and Deputy Governors, and has the right of consultation over the appointment of the two remaining MPC members from within the Bank. The Act also provides that the Government has the power to give instructions to the Bank on interest rates for a limited period in extreme circumstances. This power has never been used.

Ministerial arrangements

At HM Treasury the Chancellor is supported by a political team of four junior ministers and by permanent civil servants. The most important junior minister is the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, a member of the Cabinet, to whom the negotiations with other government departments on the details of government spending are delegated, followed by the Paymaster General, the Financial Secretary to the Treasury and the Economic Secretary to the Treasury. Two other officials are given the title of a Secretary to the Treasury, although neither is a government minister in the Treasury: the Parliamentary Secretary to the Treasury is the Government Chief Whip in the House of Commons; the Permanent Secretary to the Treasury is not a minister but the senior civil servant in the Treasury.

The holder of the office of Chancellor is ex-officio Second Lord of the Treasury. As Second Lord, his official residence is Number 11 Downing Street in London, next door to the residence of the First Lord of the Treasury (a post usually, though not always, held by the Prime Minister), who resides in 10 Downing Street. While in the past both houses were private residences, today they serve as interlinked offices, with the occupant living in a small apartment made from attic rooms previously resided in by servants.

The Chancellor is obliged to be a member of the Privy Council, and thus is styled the Right Honourable (Rt. Hon.). Because the House of Lords is excluded from Finance bills, the office is effectively limited to members of the House of Commons.

Accoutrements of office

Official residence

The Chancellor’s official residence is No. 11 Downing Street. In 1997, the then First and Second Lords, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown respectively, swapped apartments, as the Chancellor’s apartment in No. 11 was bigger and thus better suited to the needs of Blair (who had children) than Brown who was at that stage unmarried. So although No. 11 was still officially Brown’s residence, he actually resided in the apartment in the attic of No. 10, and Blair although officially residing in No. 10 actually lived in the attic apartment of No. 11.

Budget box

The Chancellor traditionally carries his Budget speech to the House of Commons in a particular red briefcase. The Chancellor’s red briefcase is identical to the briefcases used by all other government ministers (known as ministerial boxes or “red boxes”) to transport their official papers but is better known because the Chancellor traditionally displays the briefcase, containing the Budget speech, to the press in the morning before delivering the speech.

The original Budget briefcase was first used by William Ewart Gladstone in 1860 and continued in use until 1965 when James Callaghan was the first Chancellor to break with tradition when he used a newer box. Prior to Gladstone, a generic red briefcase of varying design and specification was used. The practice is said to have begun in the late 16th century, when Queen Elizabeth I’s representative Francis Throckmorton presented the Spanish Ambassador, Bernardino de Mendoza, with a specially constructed red briefcase filled with black puddings.[citation needed]

In July 1997, Gordon Brown became the second Chancellor to use a new box for the Budget. Made by industrial trainees at Babcock Rosyth Defence Ltd ship and submarine dockyard in Fife, the new box is made of yellow pine, with a brass handle and lock, covered in scarlet leather and embossed with the Royal initials and crest and the Chancellor’s title.

In March 2008, Alistair Darling reverted to using the original budget briefcase.

Chancellors of the Exchequer of England, 1316-1327

Name

Took office

Left office

Hervey de Stanton

1316

1327

Chancellors of the Exchequer of England, c. 1558-1708

John Fortescue of Salden, Chancellor to Queen Elizabeth I and King James I of England for 14 years

Name

Portrait

Took office

Left office

Sir John Baker

c. 1558

c. 1559

Sir Richard Sackville

c. 1559

1566

Sir Walter Mildmay

1566

1589

Sir John Fortescue

1589

1603

The Earl of Dunbar

1603

1606

Sir Julius Caesar

1606

1614

Sir Fulke Greville

1614

1621

Sir Richard Weston

1621

1628

The Lord Barrett of Newburgh

1628

1629

The Lord Cottington

1629

1642

Sir John Colepeper

1642

1643

Sir Edward Hyde

19 July 1642

1646

The Lord Ashley

13 May 1661

22 November 1672

Sir John Duncombe

22 November 1672

2 May 1676

Sir John Ernle

2 May 1676

9 April 1689

The Lord Delamere

9 April 1689

18 March 1690

Richard Hampden

18 March 1690

10 May 1694

Charles Montagu

10 May 1694

2 June 1699

John Smith

2 June 1699

27 March 1701

Hon. Henry Boyle

27 March 1701

22 April 1708

Chancellors of the Exchequer of Great Britain, 1708-1817

Robert Walpole, de facto first Prime Minister who also served as Chancellor of the Exchequer for more than 22 years. In this picture Walpole is wearing the Chancellor’s robe of office.

William Pitt the Younger, Chancellor of the Exchequer for 19 years and 9 months, all but 9 months as Prime Minister simultaneously, and who introduced Britain’s first income tax to pay for the Napoleonic Wars.

Name

Portrait

Took office

Left office

Political party

Prime Minister

Sir John Smith

22 April 1708

11 August 1710

Whig

Robert Harley

11 August 1710

4 June 1711

Tory

Robert Benson

4 June 1711

21 August 1713

Tory

Sir William Wyndham, Bt

21 August 1713

13 October 1714

Tory

Sir Richard Onslow, Bt

13 October 1714

12 October 1715

Whig

Robert Walpole

12 October 1715

15 April 1717

Whig

The Viscount Stanhope

15 April 1717

20 March 1718

Whig

John Aislabie

20 March 1718

23 January 1721

Whig

Sir John Pratt

(interim)

2 February 1721

3 April 1721

Whig

Sir Robert Walpole

3 April 1721

12 February 1742

Whig

Sir Robert Walpole

Samuel Sandys

12 February 1742

12 December 1743

Whig

The Earl of Wilmington

Henry Pelham

12 December 1743

8 March 1754

Whig

Henry Pelham

Sir William Lee

(interim)

8 March 1754

6 April 1754

Whig

The Duke of Newcastle

Henry Bilson Legge

6 April 1754

25 November 1755

Whig

Sir George Lyttelton, Bt

25 November 1755

16 November 1756

Whig

Henry Bilson Legge

16 November 1756

13 April 1757

Whig

The Duke of Devonshire

The Lord Mansfield

(interim)

13 April 1757

2 July 1757

Whig

The Duke of Newcastle

Henry Bilson Legge

2 July 1757

19 March 1761

Whig

The Viscount Barrington

19 March 1761

29 May 1762

Whig

Sir Francis Dashwood, Bt

29 May 1762

16 April 1763

Tory

The Earl of Bute

George Grenville

16 April 1763

16 July 1765

Whig

George Grenville

William Dowdeswell

16 July 1765

2 August 1766

Whig

The Marquess of Rockingham

Hon. Charles Townshend

2 August 1766

4 September 1767 (died)

Whig

The Earl of Chatham

Lord North

11 September 1767

27 March 1782

Tory

The Duke of Grafton

Lord North

Lord John Cavendish

27 March 1782

10 July 1782

Whig

The Marquess of Rockingham

William Pitt the Younger

10 July 1782

31 March 1783

Whig

The Earl of Shelburne

Lord John Cavendish

2 April 1783

19 December 1783

Whig

(Fox-North Coalition)

The Duke of Portland

William Pitt the Younger

19 December 1783

14 March 1801

Tory

William Pitt the Younger

Henry Addington

14 March 1801

10 May 1804

Tory

Henry Addington

William Pitt the Younger

10 May 1804

23 January 1806 (died)

Tory

William Pitt the Younger

Lord Henry Petty

5 February 1806

26 March 1807

Whig

(Ministry of All the Talents)

Lord Grenville

Spencer Perceval

26 March 1807

12 May 1812 (died)

Tory

The Duke of Portland

Spencer Perceval

Nicholas Vansittart

12 May 1812

12 July 1817

Tory

Lord Liverpool

Chancellors of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom, 1817-1902

Although the Kingdoms of Great Britain and Ireland had been united by the Act of Union 1800 (39 & 40 Geo. III c. 67), the Exchequers of the two Kingdoms were not consolidated until 1817 under 56 Geo. III c. 98. For the holders of the Irish office before this date, see Irish Chancellor of the Exchequer.

Name

Portrait

Took office

Left office

Political party

Prime Minister

Nicholas Vansittart

12 July 1817

31 January 1823

Tory

Lord Liverpool

Frederick John Robinson

31 January 1823

20 April 1827

Tory

George Canning

20 April 1827

8 August 1827 (died)

Tory

George Canning

The Lord Tenterden

(interim)

8 August 1827

3 September 1827

Tory

The Viscount Goderich

John Charles Herries

3 September 1827

26 January 1828

Tory

Henry Goulburn

26 January 1828

22 November 1830

Tory

The Duke of Wellington

Viscount Althorp

22 November 1830

14 November 1834

Whig

The Earl Grey

The Viscount Melbourne

The Lord Denman

14 November 1834

15 December 1834

Whig

(Conservative Provisional Government)

The Duke of Wellington

Sir Robert Peel, Bt

15 December 1834

8 April 1835

Conservative

Sir Robert Peel, Bt

Thomas Spring Rice

18 April 1835

26 August 1839

Whig

The Viscount Melbourne

Francis Baring

26 August 1839

30 August 1841

Whig

Henry Goulburn

3 September 1841

27 June 1846

Conservative

Sir Robert Peel, Bt

Sir Charles Wood, Bt

6 July 1846

21 February 1852

Whig

Lord John Russell

Benjamin Disraeli

27 February 1852

17 December 1852

Conservative

The Earl of Derby

William Ewart Gladstone

28 December 1852

28 February 1855

Peelite

(Coalition)

The Earl of Aberdeen

Sir George Cornewall Lewis, Bt

28 February 1855

21 February 1858

Whig

The Viscount Palmerston

Benjamin Disraeli

26 February 1858

11 June 1859

Conservative

The Earl of Derby

William Ewart Gladstone

18 June 1859

26 June 1866

Liberal

The Viscount Palmerston

The Earl Russell

Benjamin Disraeli

6 July 1866

29 February 1868

Conservative

The Earl of Derby

George Ward Hunt

29 February 1868

1 December 1868

Conservative

Benjamin Disraeli

Robert Lowe

9 December 1868

11 August 1873

Liberal

William Ewart Gladstone

William Ewart Gladstone

11 August 1873

17 February 1874

Liberal

Sir Stafford Northcote, Bt

21 February 1874

21 April 1880

Conservative

Benjamin Disraeli

William Ewart Gladstone

28 April 1880

16 December 1882

Liberal

William Ewart Gladstone

Hugh Childers

16 December 1882

9 June 1885

Liberal

Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt

24 June 1885

28 January 1886

Conservative

The Marquess of Salisbury

Sir William Vernon Harcourt

6 February 1886

20 July 1886

Liberal

William Ewart Gladstone

Lord Randolph Churchill

3 August 1886

22 December 1886

Conservative

The Marquess of Salisbury

George Goschen

14 January 1887

11 August 1892

Liberal Unionist

Sir William Vernon Harcourt

18 August 1892

21 June 1895

Liberal

William Ewart Gladstone

The Earl of Rosebery

Sir Michael Hicks Beach, Bt

29 June 1895

11 August 1902

Conservative

The Marquess of Salisbury

Chancellors of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom, 1902 to date

Name

Portrait

Took office

Left office

Political party

Prime Minister

Charles Ritchie

11 August 1902

9 October 1903

Conservative

Arthur Balfour

Austen Chamberlain

9 October 1903

4 December 1905

Liberal Unionist

H. H. Asquith

10 December 1905

12 April 1908

Liberal

Henry Campbell-Bannerman

David Lloyd George

12 April 1908

25 May 1915

Liberal

Herbert Henry Asquith

Reginald McKenna

25 May 1915

10 December 1916

Liberal

(Coalition)

Andrew Bonar Law

10 December 1916

10 January 1919

Conservative

(Coalition)

David Lloyd George

Austen Chamberlain

10 January 1919

1 April 1921

Sir Robert Horne

1 April 1921

19 October 1922

Stanley Baldwin

27 October 1922

27 August 1923

Conservative

Andrew Bonar Law

Stanley Baldwin

Neville Chamberlain

27 August 1923

22 January 1924

Conservative

Stanley Baldwin

Philip Snowden

22 January 1924

3 November 1924

Labour

Ramsay MacDonald

Winston Churchill

6 November 1924

4 June 1929

Conservative

Stanley Baldwin

Philip Snowden

7 June 1929

24 August 1931

Labour

Ramsay MacDonald

24 August 1931

5 November 1931

National Labour

(National Government)

Neville Chamberlain

5 November 1931

28 May 1937

Conservative

(National Government)

Ramsay MacDonald

Stanley Baldwin

Sir John Simon

28 May 1937

12 May 1940

Liberal National

(National Government;

War Government)

Neville Chamberlain

Sir Kingsley Wood

12 May 1940

21 September 1943 (died)

Conservative

(Coalition)

Winston Churchill

Sir John Anderson

24 September 1943

26 July 1945

National Independent

(Coalition)

Hugh Dalton

27 July 1945

13 November 1947

Labour

Clement Attlee

Sir Stafford Cripps

13 November 1947

19 October 1950

Labour

Hugh Gaitskell

19 October 1950

26 October 1951

Labour

R. A. Butler

26 October 1951

20 December 1955

Conservative

Sir Winston Churchill

Harold Macmillan

20 December 1955

13 January 1957

Conservative

Sir Anthony Eden

Peter Thorneycroft

13 January 1957

6 January 1958

Conservative

Harold Macmillan

Derick Heathcoat-Amory

6 January 1958

27 July 1960

Conservative

Selwyn Lloyd

27 July 1960

13 July 1962

Conservative

Reginald Maudling

13 July 1962

16 October 1964

Conservative

Sir Alec Douglas-Home

James Callaghan

16 October 1964

30 November 1967

Labour

Harold Wilson

Roy Jenkins

30 November 1967

19 June 1970

Labour

Iain Macleod

20 June 1970

20 July 1970 (died)

Conservative

Edward Heath

Anthony Barber

25 July 1970

28 February 1974

Conservative

Denis Healey

1 March 1974

4 May 1979

Labour

Harold Wilson

James Callaghan

Sir Geoffrey Howe

4 May 1979

11 June 1983

Conservative

Margaret Thatcher

Nigel Lawson

11 June 1983

26 October 1989

Conservative

John Major

26 October 1989

28 November 1990

Conservative

Norman Lamont

28 November 1990

27 May 1993

Conservative

John Major

Kenneth Clarke

27 May 1993

2 May 1997

Conservative

Gordon Brown

2 May 1997

27 June 2007

Labour

Tony Blair

Alistair Darling

28 June 2007

incumbent

Labour

Gordon Brown

See also

List of Lord High Treasurers

Shadow Chancellor of the Exchequer

Notes and references

^ Joseph Haydn, Horace Ockerby (ed.): The Book of Dignities, 3rd edition, Part III (Political and Official), p. 164. W.H. Allen & Co., London 1894, reprinted by Firecrest Publishing Ltd, Bath, 1969

^ http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Gordon_Brown_-_Chancellor_of_the_Exchequer/id/1434949

^ http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/monetarypolicy/framework.htm

^ a b c d e f g h Also served as Prime Minister for some or all of their Chancellorship.

^ a b c d e f Died in office.

^ Joseph Haydn, Horace Ockerby (ed.): The Book of Dignities, 3rd edition, Part X (Ireland), p. 562. W.H. Allen & Co., London 1894, reprinted by Firecrest Publishing Ltd, Bath, 1969

v  d  e

Chancellors of the Exchequer

of England

Giffard  Stanton  Catesby  Berners  Baker  Mildmay  Fortescue  Dunbar  Caesar  Brooke  Portland  Barrett  Cottington  Colepeper  Clarendon  Shaftesbury  Duncombe  Ernle  Warrington  Hampden  Halifax  Smith  Carleton

of Great Britain

Carleton  Smith  Oxford/Mortimer  Bingley  Wyndham  Onslow  Walpole  Stanhope  Aislabie  Pratt  Walpole  Sandys  Pelham  Lee  Bilson-Legge  Lyttelton  Bilson-Legge  Mansfield  Bilson-Legge  Barrington  le Despencer  Grenville  Dowdeswell  Townshend  North  Cavendish  Pitt  Cavendish  Pitt  Sidmouth  Pitt  Lansdowne  Perceval  Bexley

of the

United Kingdom

Bexley  Goderich  Canning  Tenterden  Herries  Goulburn  Spencer  Denman  Peel  Monteagle  Northbrook  Goulburn  Halifax  Disraeli  Gladstone  Lewis  Disraeli  Gladstone  Disraeli  Hunt  Sherbrooke  Gladstone  Iddesleigh  Gladstone  Childers  St Aldwyn  Harcourt  R Churchill  Goschen  Harcourt  St Aldwyn  Ritchie  A Chamberlain  Asquith  Lloyd George  McKenna  Bonar Law  A Chamberlain  Horne  Baldwin  N Chamberlain  Snowden  W Churchill  Snowden  N Chamberlain  Simon  K Wood  Waverley  Dalton  Cripps  Gaitskell  Butler  Macmillan  Thorneycroft  Amory  Lloyd  Maudling  Callaghan  Jenkins  Macleod  Barber  Healey  Howe  Lawson  Major  Lamont  Clarke  Brown  Darling

v  d  e

Great Offices of State of the United Kingdom

Prime Minister

Gordon Brown

Chancellor of the Exchequer

Alistair Darling

Foreign Secretary

David Miliband

Home Secretary

Alan Johnson

v  d  e

Her Majesty’s Treasury

Headquarters: 1, Horse Guards Road

Ministers

Chancellor of the Exchequer and Second Lord of the Treasury  Chief Secretary to the Treasury  Financial Secretary to the Treasury  Economic Secretary to the Treasury  Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury

Executive agencies

Buying Solutions (part of the Office of Government Commerce)  National Savings and Investments  Royal Mint  UK Debt Management Office

v  d  e

Economy of the United Kingdom

By topic

Pound sterling  Banknotes  Coinage  Bank of England  Monetary Policy Committee  HM Treasury  Chancellor of the Exchequer  The City  FTSE 100 Index  Economic geography of the UK  Economic history of the UK

England

Birmingham  Bristol  Cornwall  Croydon  Devon  Leeds  Liverpool  London  Manchester  Sheffield

Northern Ireland

Belfast

Scotland

Aberdeen  Edinburgh

Wales

Cardiff  Swansea

Categories: HM Treasury | Chancellors of the Exchequer | Economy of the United Kingdom | Exchequer offices | Lists of government ministers of the United Kingdom | Ceremonial officers in the United Kingdom | Finance ministries | Current ministerial offices in the United KingdomHidden categories: All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements from January 2008 | Articles that include images for deletion

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