Kingsley Wood

Kingsley Wood
Chancellor of the Exchequer
In office
12 May 1940 – 21 September 1943
Prime MinisterWinston Churchill
Preceded bySir John Simon
Succeeded bySir John Anderson
Lord Privy Seal
In office
3 April 1940 – 12 May 1940
Prime MinisterNeville Chamberlain
Preceded bySamuel Hoare
Succeeded byClement Attlee
Secretary of State for Air
In office
16 May 1938 – 3 April 1940
Prime MinisterNeville Chamberlain
Preceded byPhilip Cunliffe-Lister
Succeeded bySir Samuel Hoare
Minister of Health
In office
7 June 1935 – 16 May 1938
Prime MinisterStanley Baldwin
Neville Chamberlain
Preceded byHilton Young
Succeeded byWalter Elliot
Postmaster General
In office
25 August 1931 – 7 June 1935
Prime MinisterRamsay MacDonald
Stanley Baldwin
Preceded byWilliam Ormsby-Gore
Succeeded byGeorge Tryon
Member of Parliament
for Woolwich West
In office
14 December 1918 – 21 September 1943
Preceded byOffice Created
Succeeded byFrancis Beech
Personal details
Born
Howard Kingsley Wood

(1881-08-19)19 August 1881
Kingston-Upon-Hull, England
Died21 September 1943(1943-09-21) (aged 62)
London, England
Political partyConservative
Spouse
Agnes Lilian
(m. 1905)
Children1 daughter

Sir Howard Kingsley Wood (19 August 1881 – 21 September 1943) was a British Conservative politician. The son of a Wesleyan Methodist minister, he qualified as a solicitor, and successfully specialised in industrial insurance. He became a member of the London County Council and then a Member of Parliament.

Wood served as junior minister to Neville Chamberlain at the Ministry of Health, establishing a close personal and political alliance. His first cabinet post was Postmaster General, in which he transformed the British Post Office from a bureaucracy to a business. As Secretary of State for Air in the months before the Second World War he oversaw a huge increase in the production of warplanes to bring Britain up to parity with Germany. When Winston Churchill became Prime Minister in 1940, Wood was made Chancellor of the Exchequer, in which post he adopted policies propounded by John Maynard Keynes, changing the role of HM Treasury from custodian of government income and expenditure to steering the entire British economy.

One of Wood's last innovations was the creation of Pay As You Earn, under which income tax is deducted from employees' current pay, rather than being collected retrospectively. This system remains in force in Britain. Wood died suddenly on the day on which the new system was to be announced to Parliament.


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