John James Cowperthwaite

Sir John James Cowperthwaite, KBE, CMG (Chinese: 郭伯偉爵士; 25 April 1915 – 21 January 2006), was a British civil servant and the Financial Secretary of Hong Kong from 1961 to 1971. His introduction of free market economic policies are widely credited with turning postwar Hong Kong into a thriving global financial centre.[1]


John James Cowperthwaite

KBE, CMG
Financial Secretary of Hong Kong
In office
17 April 1961  30 June 1971
GovernorSir Robert Black
Sir David Trench
Preceded byArthur Grenfell Clarke
Succeeded byCharles Philip Haddon-Cave
Personal details
Born(1915-04-25)25 April 1915
Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
Died21 January 2006(2006-01-21) (aged 90)
Ninewells Hospital, Dundee, Scotland, United Kingdom
Spouse(s)Sheila Mary Thomson
ChildrenJohn James Hamish Cowperthwaite
Alma materMerchiston Castle School
St Andrews University
Christ's College, Cambridge
John James Cowperthwaite
Traditional Chinese郭伯偉

Early years

Cowperthwaite was born on 25 April 1915 in Edinburgh to John Cowperthwaite, a surveyor of taxes, and Jessie Jarvis.[2] He attended Merchiston Castle School in Edinburgh, Scotland, and later studied classics at St Andrews University and Christ's College, Cambridge.[3] In 1940, he gained a first class degree in economics at St Andrews University on an accelerated one year degree programme with Professor James Nisbet.[2] He joined the British Colonial Administrative Service as a Hong Kong Cadet in 1941, but during World War II was posted to Sierra Leone instead because of the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong.[3]

Hong Kong

He arrived in Hong Kong in 1945 and was assigned to the Department of Supplies, Trade and Industry.[2] He was asked to find ways in which the government could boost post-war economic outlook but found the economy was recovering swiftly without any government intervention.[3] He took the lesson to heart and positive non-interventionism became the focus of his economic policy as Financial Secretary.[3] Cowperthwaite built on the economic policies of his predecessors, Arthur Clark and Geoffrey Follows, promoting free trade, low taxation, budget surpluses, limited state intervention in the economy, a distrust of industrial planning, and sound money.[2] It was a policy mix that drew more on Adam Smith and Gladstone than on Keynes and Attlee. However, Cowperthwaite was a pragmatic civil servant rather than a theoretician and he based his policies on his experience, empirical data and what he believed would work in practice.[4]

He refused to compile GDP statistics arguing that such data was not useful to managing an economy and would lead to officials meddling in the economy.[5] He was once asked what the key thing that poor countries could do to improve their growth. He replied: “They should abolish the office of national statistics.”[6] According to Catherine R. Schenk, Cowperthwaite's policies helped it to develop from one of the poorest places on earth to one of the wealthiest and most prosperous: "Low taxes, lax employment laws, absence of government debt, and free trade are all pillars of the Hong Kong experience of economic development."[7] The Economic Freedom of the World 2015 Report ranks Hong Kong as both the freest economy in the world, a distinction it has held since this index began ranking countries in 1975, and among the most prosperous.[8]

Throughout the 1960s, Cowperthwaite refused to implement free universal primary education, contributing to relatively high illiteracy rates in today's older generation. Compulsory education was only introduced under the governorship of Sir Murray MacLehose the next decade.[9] At a time when Hong Kong's roads were crippled by traffic congestion, Cowperthwaite also steadfastly opposed construction of the Mass Transit Railway, a costly undertaking which was nevertheless built following his retirement.[10] It would later become one of the world's most heavily utilised (and profitable) railways.

In 1960, he was appointed as an Officer of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (OBE)[11] and, in 1964, a Companion of the Most Distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George (CMG).[12] He later became a Knight Commander of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire (KBE) in 1968.[13] He was highly praised by Nobel laureate Milton Friedman just before his death.[3][14]

Commentators have credited his management of the economy of Hong Kong as a leading example of how small government encourages growth.[15][16]

Post–civil service career

After leaving his retirement, he was international adviser to Jardine Fleming, the Hong Kong–based investment bank until 1981. He retired and left Hong Kong for St Andrews, Scotland and became a member of The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews.

Personal life and death

He married Sheila Thomson in 1941. They had one son. He died in Scotland on 21 January 2006, aged 90; his son predeceased him.

References

  1. "Meet the invisible hand behind Hong Kong's rise". The Economist. 5 October 2017. ISSN 0013-0613. Retrieved 12 April 2019.
  2. Monnery, Neil (2017). Architect of Prosperity: Sir John Cowperthwaite and the making of Hong Kong. LPP. ISBN 978-1907994692.
  3. Lawrence Reed, The Man Behind the Hong Kong Miracle, The Freeman, 10 February 2014
  4. Monnery, Neil (January 2018). "Sir John Cowperthwaite and the making of Hong Kong". Royal Economic Society.
  5. Monnery, Neil. "Hong Kong's postwar transformation shows how fewer data can sometimes boost growth". London School of Economics Business Review.
  6. Singleton, Alex (8 February 2006). "Obituary for Sir John Cowperthwaite". The Guardian.
  7. Economic History of Hong Kong, Catherine R. Schenk, University of Glasgow, Economic History Association
  8. Economic Freedom of the World Archived 28 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine, 2015 Annual Report
  9. Writers blocked, Jason Wordie, South China Morning Post, 24 June 2012
  10. Moving Millions: The Commercial Success and Political Controversies of Hong Kong's Railway, Rikkie Yeung, Hong Kong University Press, 2008 p. 69
  11. "No. 41909". The London Gazette (Supplement). 29 December 1959. p. 24.
  12. "No. 43200". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 December 1963. p. 4.
  13. "No. 44600". The London Gazette (Supplement). 31 May 1968. p. 6317.
  14. The Hong Kong Experiment | Hoover Institution Archived 2010-11-04 at the Wayback Machine
  15. Durkin, Martin (2010). "Britain's Trillion-Pound Horror Story". 1. Episode 1. Channel 4. Retrieved 26 September 2014.
  16. O'Rourke, Patrick J. (25 August 2000). Eat the Rich (1st in paperback ed.). Avalon Travel. ISBN 978-0-87113-760-9.
Government offices
Preceded by
Arthur Grenfell Clarke
Financial Secretary of Hong Kong
1961–1971
Succeeded by
Sir Charles Philip Haddon-Cave
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