Derek Higgs

Sir Derek Alan Higgs (3 April 1944 – 28 April 2008) was an English businessman and merchant banker.[1] He was knighted in 2004. His father, Alan Higgs, was a multimillionaire through property businesses in the Midlands.

Derek Higgs
Born(1944-04-03)3 April 1944
Died28 April 2008(2008-04-28) (aged 64)
London, UK
OccupationBusinessman
Known forHiggs review (2003).
Spouse(s)Julia Higgs, née Arguile (married 1970–2008)
Children3

Early life

Sir Derek was born in Birmingham, Warwickshire and was educated at Solihull School,[2] and in 1963 he went to the University of Bristol and graduated in Economics and Accounting in 1966.[3]

Business career

After graduating from the University of Bristol in 1966, Sir Derek joined Price Waterhouse, a large accountancy firm, and after training he qualified as a Chartered Accountant.[1] In 1969 he became a corporate finance executive at Baring Brothers, a merchant bank. He moved-on and joined S. G. Warburg & Co. in 1972 and continued his career in merchant banking.[1][4] He was also a board member of several companies including Prudential, British Land, and Coventry City Football Club.[5]

In 2002 the British Labour Government commissioned Sir Derek to chair the Review of the role and effectiveness of non-executive directors. The report, widely known as the "Higgs review" or "Higgs report", was published on 20 January 2003 and many of its recommendations for large companies have been implemented.[1][6][7]

In October 2005 he became the chairman of the Alliance & Leicester bank and worked there through difficult times, which were partly caused by the credit crunch that took effect during 2007 in Britain.[3]

Trustee

His father, Alan Higgs died in 1979, and, because he thought that inherited wealth did more harm than good, he left his entire fortune to a charity to be created after his death to help deprived children from Coventry and nearby localities.[1] The Alan Edward Higgs Charity (also sometimes incorrectly called the Alan Higgs Trust) was set up, and Sir Derek and his sister became the trustees.[2] In January 2008 he also became one of the trustees of the Scott Trust, a British non-profit organisation which owns the Guardian Media Group.[3] He has been on the Board of Trustees of The Architecture Foundation.

Personal life

Sir Derek married Julia Arguile in 1970 and they had two sons and one daughter. He died unexpectedly owing to a heart attack aged 64 years on 28 April 2008 in a London hospital.[3][5]

gollark: If you use DD/MM/YYYY AutoBotRobot queues your reminder at midnight UTC then, if you use YYYY-MM-DD it uses the current time but the provided date.
gollark: But you do need dates fairly often, and this makes it *consistent* between implementations.
gollark: For example, as well as the time-duration-type thing ("5y2mo3w" etc) it actually supports DD/MM/YYYY as well as some weird backward thing because it uses an external library for it too.
gollark: And even then it still has some weirdness.
gollark: Datetimes are very hard. AutoBotRobot has to do a bunch of stuff to make it do even roughly what people expect.

References

  1. "Sir Derek Higgs: Doctor of Laws". University of Bristol. 13 July 2005. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  2. "The MT interview by Matthew Lynn: Derek Higgs". Management Today. 1 November 2002. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  3. Treanor, Jill (29 April 2008). "Sir Derek Higgs dies suddenly aged 64". London: guardian.co.uk. Retrieved 29 April 2008.
  4. "Board Mentors: Sir Derek Higgs". CMi. Archived from the original on 3 March 2008. Retrieved 20 October 2007.
  5. "Sir Derek Higgs". London: timesonline. 30 April 2008. Retrieved 29 April 2008.
  6. Higgs, Derek (20 January 2003). "Review of the role and effectiveness of non-executive directors" (PDF). Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. Archived from the original (PDF) on 10 September 2008. Retrieved 28 April 2008.
  7. "The Higgs Review". Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform. Archived from the original on 14 April 2008. Retrieved 28 April 2008.
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