Philip Young (May 9, 1910 – January 15, 1987) was an American government official and diplomat who served as United States Ambassador to the Netherlands.
The son of Owen D. Young, Philip Young was born in Lexington, Massachusetts on May 9, 1910. He graduated from the Choate School, received his bachelor's degree from St. Lawrence University, and graduated with a master of business administration degree from Harvard University in 1933.
Young was initially employed as an economist at the Securities and Exchange Commission, where he worked until 1938, when he moved to the Treasury Department, where he worked on the Lend-Lease Program at the start of World War II. Young joined the United States Navy after the United States became involved in hostilities, serving as a Lieutenant Commander in the supply corps.
After the war Young entered the private sector, where he worked until becoming Dean of Columbia University's Business School in 1948. While at Columbia he worked closely with Dwight D. Eisenhower during Eisenhower's term as president of the university. When Eisenhower became President of the United States in 1953, he appointed Young as his personnel manager and named him to a position on the Civil Service Commission. He served until 1957, became the Commission's Chairman, and garnered mixed publicity for carrying out an executive order to purge government departments of individuals who were only suspected of being subversive.