After the Global Financial Crisis, we failed to borrow to invest in a low-carbon economy and instead prematurely adopted austerity policies. The result, says Dimitri Zenghelis (LSE), was a wasted decade of rising emissions, stagnating average wages and eroded trust in institutions. We now badly need to encourage sustainable and inclusive growth
While the 2018 Budget proposals mitigate some of the risks of Universal Credit implementation and ma...
Anna Valero writes that the underlying and urgent issues that were facing the UK economy before the ...
Wolfgang Schäuble, the outgoing German finance minister, warned in an FT interview last week that ‘e...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
The financial industry may distort post-crisis policy interventions in their favour by colluding wit...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
On 21 July, the European Central Bank decided to raise interest rates for the first time since 2011 ...
The European Commission announced a new ‘Green Deal’ at the end of 2019, just months before the star...
In Crashed: How a decade of financial crises changed the world, author Adam Tooze proposes a remarka...
Abby Innes writes that the vote to leave the EU and the administrative chaos around it pull into foc...
Nicholas Sowels provides an up-to-date account of inequalities in the UK since the financial crisis ...
Low German wages are often cited as a key contributing factor to imbalances in the Eurozone. Donato ...
The EU’s enlargement process has stalled over the last decade and there appears little prospect of a...
An economy is defined as a “circular flow of income”. One person’s spending is another person’s inco...
Eight years since the Eurozone crisis began, there is still no agreement on a comprehensive set of r...
While the 2018 Budget proposals mitigate some of the risks of Universal Credit implementation and ma...
Anna Valero writes that the underlying and urgent issues that were facing the UK economy before the ...
Wolfgang Schäuble, the outgoing German finance minister, warned in an FT interview last week that ‘e...
Contrary to some predictions, Britain's economy has not crashed in the two years since the EU refere...
The financial industry may distort post-crisis policy interventions in their favour by colluding wit...
The Covid-19 pandemic has prompted renewed debate over the architecture of Europe’s Economic and Mon...
On 21 July, the European Central Bank decided to raise interest rates for the first time since 2011 ...
The European Commission announced a new ‘Green Deal’ at the end of 2019, just months before the star...
In Crashed: How a decade of financial crises changed the world, author Adam Tooze proposes a remarka...
Abby Innes writes that the vote to leave the EU and the administrative chaos around it pull into foc...
Nicholas Sowels provides an up-to-date account of inequalities in the UK since the financial crisis ...
Low German wages are often cited as a key contributing factor to imbalances in the Eurozone. Donato ...
The EU’s enlargement process has stalled over the last decade and there appears little prospect of a...
An economy is defined as a “circular flow of income”. One person’s spending is another person’s inco...
Eight years since the Eurozone crisis began, there is still no agreement on a comprehensive set of r...
While the 2018 Budget proposals mitigate some of the risks of Universal Credit implementation and ma...
Anna Valero writes that the underlying and urgent issues that were facing the UK economy before the ...
Wolfgang Schäuble, the outgoing German finance minister, warned in an FT interview last week that ‘e...