The end of this week, one in which we have had both the Chancellor‘s Spring Statement, and the second reading of the awful ...
Compulsory purchase is an important institution. As the great economic historian Dan Bogart has argued, Britain made abundant ...
It has become traditional to see stories over the winter months about the NHS in crisis. In a bleak new development, stories ...
We have the highest levels of peacetime spending. We have the highest levels of public debt. We have non-existent growth, ...
The latest revelations about endemic tuition fee fraud have drawn attention once again to a truth policymakers do not want to ...
For a start, £14bn is just a drop in the ocean: public sector current spending is still forecast to climb to £1,351bn in 2029 ...
There are a number of reasons to be sceptical about this endeavour. Reeves told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg that the savings ...
Looking For Growth is not normal. But that’s exactly why it’ll work. To learn more about LFG or to support the movement, ...
In ‘Rethinking Monetary Policy’, I argue that the Bank of England’s 30-year-old commitment to inflation targeting is no ...
However, SEND is the last remaining bastion of Wild West education policy. As with many public policy initiatives, the road ...
Even 40% of UK median household income (£14,000), puts you, as an individual, just outside the global top 10%. For two adults ...
Labour’s approach is not just flawed – it’s economically reckless. Their policies are forcing businesses into untenable ...