With the threat of stagflation and interest rate rises, the current economic climate shows little sign of improvement in the near future. John Van Reenen finds that the government’s severe austerity programme, with its very pessimistic view of future UK growth is risking the recovery through premature scrapping of our economic capital. Policies such as the cap on skilled migrants and the planning decentralisation will reduce the potential for growth, not raise it. Instead, the government should get the conditions right for increasing competition, innovation and education, and focus on matching the UK’s comparative advantage with areas of future growth such as higher education
With monetary policy having no effect on investment decisions, we need other means to boost growth, ...
The UK’s Spending Review has been forced on the British Chancellor because weak economic growth has ...
In the face of lower than expected growth, pressure is building on the Chancellor George Osborne, to...
With the threat of stagflation and interest rate rises, the current economic climate shows little si...
Today saw the announcement of 0.6 per cent GDP growth for the second quarter of this year, leading t...
The real problems for the UK are inadequate long-run investment in infrastructure, innovation and hu...
In this article, John Van Reenen looks at the UK’s economic performance since the global financial c...
Some commentators have argued that the prosperity boom experienced under the last Labour government ...
Today the IMF cast doubt on the Chancellor’s deficit reduction programme and new figures suggested t...
According to figures released today by the Office for National Statistics , the UK economy grew by o...
The U.K.’s recent economic developments can be broken down in two distinct periods. The period 2002-...
According to figures released today by the Office for National Statistics , the UK economy grew by o...
Both the UK and the Eurozone now have significant problems in achieving sustainable growth and incre...
In the face of lower than expected growth, pressure is building on the Chancellor George Osborne, to...
John Van Reenen reacts to the news today that the UK has avoided economic contraction in the last qu...
With monetary policy having no effect on investment decisions, we need other means to boost growth, ...
The UK’s Spending Review has been forced on the British Chancellor because weak economic growth has ...
In the face of lower than expected growth, pressure is building on the Chancellor George Osborne, to...
With the threat of stagflation and interest rate rises, the current economic climate shows little si...
Today saw the announcement of 0.6 per cent GDP growth for the second quarter of this year, leading t...
The real problems for the UK are inadequate long-run investment in infrastructure, innovation and hu...
In this article, John Van Reenen looks at the UK’s economic performance since the global financial c...
Some commentators have argued that the prosperity boom experienced under the last Labour government ...
Today the IMF cast doubt on the Chancellor’s deficit reduction programme and new figures suggested t...
According to figures released today by the Office for National Statistics , the UK economy grew by o...
The U.K.’s recent economic developments can be broken down in two distinct periods. The period 2002-...
According to figures released today by the Office for National Statistics , the UK economy grew by o...
Both the UK and the Eurozone now have significant problems in achieving sustainable growth and incre...
In the face of lower than expected growth, pressure is building on the Chancellor George Osborne, to...
John Van Reenen reacts to the news today that the UK has avoided economic contraction in the last qu...
With monetary policy having no effect on investment decisions, we need other means to boost growth, ...
The UK’s Spending Review has been forced on the British Chancellor because weak economic growth has ...
In the face of lower than expected growth, pressure is building on the Chancellor George Osborne, to...