Former British prime minister Tony Blair is to join Wall Street
bank JP Morgan as a part-time advisor, the Financial Times reported
Thursday.
Blair, who became international envoy to the Middle East after
standing down following a decade as premier in June last year,
will advise the financial services giant on political and strategic
issues.
He told the paper he now expected to take on "a small
handful" of similar appointments, adding: "Nowadays,
the intersection between politics and the economy in different
parts of the world, including the emerging markets, is very
strong."
Blair declined to say how much he would be paid for his work
with the bank but added that he planned to launch an interfaith
foundation later this year and would also work on climate change
issues.
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JP Morgan's chief executive Jamie Dimon said that Blair would
be "enormously valuable" to the firm.
"There are only a handful of people in the world who have
the knowledge and relationships that he has," he added.
Since leaving office, Blair has undertaken a series of lucrative
speaking engagements, including a trip to a luxury Chinese housing
estate in November last year for which he earned a reported
500,000 dollars (340,000 euros) for three hours' work.
Blair's predecessor as prime minister, John Major, became an
advisor to private equity firm Carlyle after leaving office,
while Margaret Thatcher became a consultant to tobacco group
Philip Morris.