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    Sir Geoffrey Owen

    • Wednesday, 18 December, 2024
      Semiconductors
      There’s an opportunity for the UK in semiconductors

      The country has lagged behind on manufacturing but a fast-expanding sector offers a way forward

      A worker inspects a semiconductor wafer at what was known as the Newport Wafer Fab plant
    • Tuesday, 5 December, 2023
      ObituaryJohn Gardiner
      John Gardiner, journalist and businessman, 1936-2023

      He made his mark first as a writer for the FT’s Lex column, and then as chief executive of a prominent engineering group

      John Gardiner was fearless in his analysis, in his cross questioning of the captains of British industry and utterly straightforward
    • Monday, 27 November, 2023
      ReviewBusiness books
      The Corporation and the Twentieth Century — a history of US business

      Richard Langlois reframes the economic, institutional and intellectual development of the managerial era

      A factory with large machines
    • Monday, 8 May, 2023
      ObituaryPaul Girolami
      Paul Girolami, businessman, 1926-2023

      The executive who transformed the pharmaceuticals company then known as Glaxo into a global industry leader

      Sir Paul Girolami
    • Friday, 10 February, 2023
      UK industrial strategy
      The merry-go-round of business ministry remodelling starts again

      Hived off, put back together, renamed and refashioned, the UK’s industry department could do with some stability

      Harold Wilson arriving at 10 Downing Street after being elected as Britain’s new prime minister in 1964
    • Monday, 29 August, 2022
      Mergers & Acquisitions
      Heirs to Thatcher ignore her lead on industrial policy

      Conservative leadership rivals should not indulge in the ‘pseudo-patriotic hysteria’ over takeovers

      Workers drive a train inside the Tata steelworks in Port Talbot, Wales
    • Sunday, 20 February, 2022
      Investor activism
      Shareholder capitalism works best for society

      Businesses can and should pursue environmental and other social goals within the present legal framework

      In 2018, Google withdrew from an artificial intelligence contract with the Department of Defense after employees protested that the technology might be used in a way that infringed human rights
    • Friday, 29 May, 2020
      UK politics
      UK’s Project Birch revives age-old problem of ‘picking winners’

      State aid policy must stand on its own merits and not be muddled up with Covid-19

      26th May 1970: Conservative Party leader Mr Edward Heath holds up with pride the new Conservative election manifesto entitled 'A Better Tomorrow' at a press conference in London. (Photo by Central Press/Getty Images)
    • Friday, 8 November, 2019
      UK general election
      Harold Wincott’s general election lessons

      The need to keep public spending under control was a consistent theme of his writing

      MANCHESTER, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 07: Sajid Javid delivers a speech on the Conservative Party's plans for the economy on November 7, 2019 in Manchester, England. Sajid Javid, who holds the government position of Chancellor of the Exchequer in Boris Johnsons Cabinet, set out the Conservative partys plans to invest in priorities such as education, technology, and infrastructure as the engines of growth over the next decade. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
    • Tuesday, 27 August, 2019
      Head to HeadCorporate governance
      Are companies right to abandon the shareholder-first mantra?

      Two experts debate the Business Roundtable’s decision to rethink corporate purpose

    • Friday, 26 April, 2019
      Chinese business & finance
      How to meet the challenge of China

      Western governments should think twice before trying to keep Chinese companies out

      An employee walks past a logo in the reception area of the Huawei Technologies Co. Cyber Security Transparency Centre in Brussels, Belgium, on Monday, April 15, 2019. Huawei's ability to make inroads into Europe's future telecom infrastructure may be more about regulatory hurdles than outright bans. Photographer: Geert Vanden Wijngaert/Bloomberg
    • Wednesday, 6 February, 2019
      Automobiles
      The future of Britain’s car industry is far from certain

      Automotive production is too important and politically sensitive for governments to leave alone

      Employees works on a Jaguar automobile on the production line at Tata Motors Ltd.'s Jaguar assembly plant in Castle Bromwich, U.K., on Thursday, March 16, 2017. Jaguar Land Rover Chief Executive Officer Ralf Speth backed Nissan Motor Co.'s calls for extra funding for car-parts makers in the wake of last years Brexit vote, while cautioning that there must be "fair play" for all U.K. automakers. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
    • Friday, 16 November, 2018
      Corporate governance
      Do not confuse boards by muddling their mandate

      Companies exist to provide goods and services at a price which makes a profit

      E3KD8W Businessman Addressing Meeting Around Boardroom Table
    • Tuesday, 17 April, 2018
      Batteries
      Britain’s electric car aspirations lag way behind Asia’s headstart

      The UK’s quest to lead the world in battery technology is 20 years too late

      An employee assembles lithium-ion battery modules at the Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) automobile manufacturing plant in Dingolfing, Germany, on Thursday, Aug. 21, 2014. BMW agreed to spend billions of euros increasing its orders of Samsung SDI Co. batteries as the world's largest maker of luxury cars expands its line of electric vehicles. Photographer: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
    • Friday, 17 March, 2017
      UK inward investment
      Britain’s national champions can thrive without protection

      Blocking acquisitions from overseas is not the way to support UK business

      Artwork for FTWeekend comment - issue dated 18.03.17
    • Wednesday, 3 August, 2016
      ObituaryUK economy
      George Cyriax, economist and journalist, 1935-2016

      Writer who helped to set the FT’s 1960s agenda

      George Cyriax
    • Wednesday, 20 July, 2016
      Brexit
      The unhappy story of British industrial strategy

      May should beware the unintended consequences of state intervention, writes Geoffrey Owen

      (FILES) In this file picture taken on May 8, 2014 a woman walks outside British pharmaceutical company AstraZeneca in Macclesfield, northwest England. The share price of British drugmaker AstraZeneca slumped on May 19, 2014 after it rejected a final takeover bid from US rival Pfizer worth $117 billion (85 billion euros). The shares tumbled 13.99 percent to ?41.49 in early morning deals on London's FTSE 100 index of leading companies, which was down 0.49 percent at 6,822.25 points. AFP PHOTO/ANDREW YATES (Photo credit should read ANDREW YATES/AFP/Getty Images)
    • Tuesday, 19 April, 2016
      Technology sector
      The secret of a world-class biotech sector

      The UK’s poor progress has less to do with its flaws than with US strengths, writes Geoffrey Owen

      A scientist scrolls through their tablet in a loboratory
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