Sir Jon Cunliffe is a former British central banker, diplomat and government official.
He served from 2013 to 2023 as Deputy Governor for Financial Stability at the Bank of England, responsible for: financial stability; the regulation and supervision of payments systems, clearing houses and central securities depositories; the Bank鈥檚 international work; and, until 2020, the Bank鈥檚 role as the U.K. resolution authority. He led the Bank鈥檚 work on the regulation of stablecoins and on a potential U.K. central bank digital currency.
As Deputy Governor he was deputy Chair of Financial Policy Committee, a voting member of the Monetary Policy Committee, and a member of the Prudential Regulation Committee that oversees the regulation and supervision of banks and insurance firms in the U.K.
Prior to his role at the Bank of England, Sir Jon served in various government official roles including as the U.K. Permanent Representative to the European Union, advisor on Europe and international financial issues to two British Prime Ministers, and Second Permanent Secretary to His Majesty鈥檚 Treasury.
Sir Jon has held a number of international central bank roles: most recently as Chair of the Bank for International Settlements Committee on Payments and Financial Market Infrastructure, member of the Financial Stability Board and chair of its Cross Border Payments Committee; and the Bank of England鈥檚 deputy to the G20. Prior to joining the Bank, Sir Jon served in a number of international government roles including as the U.K. Prime Minister鈥檚 representative (鈥楽herpa鈥) to the G7 and G20 leaders鈥 groups and previously, as the U.K. Treasury deputy to the G7 and G20 ministerial groups.
In his earlier career, Sir John served in a range of positions at His Majesty鈥檚 Treasury and at the Departments of Transport and Environment.
Sir Jon has Master鈥檚 and Bachelor鈥檚 degrees in English Literature and Language from the University of Manchester and also studied and taught at the University of Western Ontario, Canada. He is married with two grown daughters.