- Peter Jay
Peter Jay (born
7 February 1937 ) is a British economist, broadcaster and diplomat.Background
Peter Jay is the son of Douglas and
Peggy Jay , both of whom were Labour Party politicians. He was educated at TheDragon School , Oxford (the alma mater of several senior Labour politicians, includingHugh Gaitskell ), followed byWinchester College (where he washead boy ) andChrist Church, Oxford , where he graduated with afirst class honours degree in PPE. He was commissioned in theRoyal Navy , then worked as acivil servant atHM Treasury before becoming ajournalist and, for 10 years, economics editor with "The Times ".Jay is the former husband of Margaret Jay, whom he married in 1961 and divorced in 1986. His friend Dr David Owen, Foreign Secretary in the government of Jay's father-in-law,
James Callaghan , appointed him UKAmbassador to theUnited States , an appointment that caused some controversy and accusations ofnepotism .Career
In the early 1970s, Jay was the principal presenter of the
London Weekend Television Sunday news analysis programme "Weekend World ". In 1972, Jay co-authored, with his friend John Birt, a series of articles for "The Times" where they criticised standard television journalism and developed what came to be called their "mission to explain".Jay subsequently returned to journalism in Britain but was initially most visible as leader of a consortium of high-profile media figures, including
David Frost andAnna Ford , who won the licence for an idea that did not work according to its business plan: he was founding chairman ofTV-am , the breakfast TV station launched by the consortium, where the initial focus on news and current affairs did not yield economic success for the company (the first to broadcast outside traditional broadcasting hours in Britain). The station was rescued after a coup that involvedJonathan Aitken and by the more down-marketRoland Rat character introduced byGreg Dyke , whose success there helped him build his credibility to become Director-General of theBBC .Peter Jay's career took a surprising turn when he became Chief of Staff to
Robert Maxwell during his most high-profile and controversial years. Margaret Jay led Maxwell's Aids Foundation around the same time, where she met her present husband professor Mike Adler. Like so many who worked for Maxwell, this left no stain on their subsequent careers.Peter Jay returned to highbrow journalism and became Economics Editor of the BBC, specially appointed by John Birt, and presented editions of
The Money Programme . His appearances on screen with explanations of major economic and business issues showed his intellectual grasp but could sometimes baffle his peak-time news audience. After his retirement, this task was handled by his successors (separately for economics and business) in a rather simpler and arguably more lucid way, with more visual illustration. Jay wrote a book, "The Road to Riches or the Wealth of Man" (2000, Weidenfeld & Nicholson), exploring the history of man's search for wealth, and presented a related BBC TV documentary series.He has been a non-executive director of the
Bank of England since 2003. He has been a governor of theDitchley Foundation since 1982.External links
* [http://www.bbcfactual.co.uk/peter_jay.htm Further information]
* [http://www.chomsky.info/interviews/19760725.htm Interview with Noam Chomsky on Anarcho-Syndicalism]
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