Post-war he started his rise up the political ladder in February 1919 when he was appointed
Parliamentary Private Secretary to
H.A.L. Fisher, President of the Board of Education. In April 1921 he was promoted to
Financial Secretary to the Treasury. In this capacity he was the link between the government and the '
Geddes Axe', the committee of business experts established by Lloyd George in the aftermath of the First World War to undertake a fundamental review of government expenditure in the hope of identifying major savings. In March 1922 Young married sculptor
Kathleen Scott, née Bruce, widow of Captain
Robert Falcon Scott. With the marriage he became stepfather to Kathleen's son, the future naturalist and yachtsman,
Peter Scott. In August 1923 Kathleen, aged 45, gave birth to their son
Wayland Young, who became a writer and
Labour politician. Through Cambridge and Bloomsbury, Young had a long-standing friendship with
E.M. Forster. Suffering writer's block while working on
A Passage to India, the novelist was Young's guest at The Lacket in early May 1922. Shortly afterwards he wrote to Young declaring, "an unfinished novel’s before me now, and sometimes I work at it with distaste and despair…You certainly have done more than any individual I know to help me by direct remarks. Your knowledge of the business of creating seemed to me profounder than that possessed by so-called artists." These comments suggest that Young gave Forster significant advice and encouragement at a crucial stage on work on the latter's eventual masterpiece. Out of office with the advent of Bonar Law's Conservative administration (following the
Carlton Club meeting in October 1922), he became
Chief Whip for the
Lloyd George Liberals and a
Privy Counsellor. Speaking at the
Gresham's School prize-giving on 13 July 1923, Young "...recommended the boys to go in for great risks and dangerous deeds. Let them have adventure, and the madder the adventure, the better." He lost his Norwich seat at the
December 1923 General Election. Although he won the seat back at the
October 1924 General Election, he devoted the rest of the 1920s to furthering his business interests. In the City of London, Young became editor of the
Financial News, 1926–29, when he introduced an Arts page which was continued by the
Financial Times when they were merged in 1946. He also joined the boards of the
Southern Railway,
English Electric, and
Hudson's Bay Company. For Westminster he became a peripatetic financial- and political-troubleshooter, undertaking inter alia financial missions to Poland (1922–3) and Iraq (1925, 1930) intended to stabilise the financial positions of these countries, the former recreated and he latter newly created after World War I. The 1930 Iraq mission saw him recommend the establishment of an Iraq Currency Board to issue a national currency, the
dinar, to replace
Indian rupees issued as temporary currency when British forces displaced the Ottomans from the former
Mesopotamia during the First World War. The Iraqi government accepted Young's recommendations in relation to the nation's currency and he became the inaugural chairman of the Iraq Currency Board on 11 June 1931. He also chaired the 1925–6 Royal Commission on Indian Currency and Finance (at which his friend
Maynard Keynes was a key witness) and the 1927–8 East African Commission on Closer Union. Young joined the
Conservative Party in 1926 during his term as MP for
Norwich. He served as a delegate to the Assembly of the
League of Nations, 1926 and 1927. In 1927 he was appointed
Knight Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire (GBE). He became MP for
Sevenoaks in 1929 and served as
Minister for Export Credits from 1929 and
Minister of Health between 1931 and 1935. The health portfolio also included responsibility for housing, including
slum clearance and rehousing. Key items of legislation to which he contributed in this period were: the
Town and Country Planning Act 1932 (which applied to all 'developable' land), the
Housing Act 1935 (which laid down standards of accommodation) and the
Restriction of Ribbon Development Act 1935 (which sought to consolidate urban development and restrict ribbon sprawl along major highways). He retired from politics in July 1935 and was created
Baron Kennet. ==After politics==