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June 2015

Will industrial strategy be confined to the past once again?

10 June 2015

Britain’s economic recovery has been driven by a resurgent London. In place of the financial collapse came the ‘Flat White Economy‘, spurred by highly skilled immigrants and in-migrants coming to work in London’s digital technology and creative sectors – estimated to make up a third of UK growth. While the surge is welcome, it has… [Read More]


Turkey’s election upset may lay the foundation for EU integration

9 June 2015

‘A European Union without Turkey at its heart is not stronger but weaker… not more secure but less… not richer but poorer… I’m here to make the case for Turkey’s membership of the EU. And to fight for it.’ – David Cameron, July 2010. During an address to the Turkish parliament, Cameron promised to ‘pave… [Read More]


Why the ECJ is making green house measures more costly

5 June 2015

The European Court of Justice has ruled against the UK’s policy of reducing tax rates for certain energy-saving materials. To encourage energy efficiency in the UK, there is a tax rate of 5% when certain energy-saving products, including solar panels, draught insulation, and controls for central heating and hot water systems, are installed in homes.… [Read More]


The UK implications of a eurozone on steroids

4 June 2015

Emmanuel Macron and Sigmar Gabriel, the economics ministers for France and Germany, have co-authored an article setting out their vision for dramatically extending the eurozone’s integration.  For those reformists and sceptics considering David Cameron’s renegotiation ending in a ‘two-speed Europe’, this is very much the higher gear. The ministers’ proposals amount to much greater social,… [Read More]


This year of all years we need the Political and Constitutional Reform Committee

3 June 2015

There is a cruel irony in the government’s decision to abolish the Political and Constitutional Reform Select Committee (PCRSC), the body responsible for holding the executive to account on democratic representation, especially in the year we celebrate the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta. Apart from being another insult to the Liberal Democrat’s legacy, the move has… [Read More]


What is a cap on agency fees likely to achieve?

2 June 2015

Recent ‘horror stories’, such as doctors being paid £3,500 for a single shift, have prompted the government to announce today that it will clamp down on staffing agencies that are ‘ripping off the NHS’. It will do this, it says, by setting maximum hourly pay rates for the employment of temporary staff, by setting limits… [Read More]


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