How to spin Britain’s economic recovery as bad news
Labour productivity is just about the worst way of analysing the impact of the last recession and Britain’s subsequent recovery
Edited by Peter Franklin
Labour productivity is just about the worst way of analysing the impact of the last recession and Britain’s subsequent recovery
There is no relationship between the part she once played in the shallow, image-obsessed ‘modernisation’ of the Conservative Party and the real change she had worked for as Home Secretary
There is no hard and fast distinction between memorising and understanding: they are mutually supporting activities.
The argument that tax cuts ‘starve the beast’ (i.e. force governments to reduce their spending) is, in practice, a weak one.
Governments can redistribute money, but not happiness
Britain finds herself between a ‘Keynesian’ America and a ‘Monetarist’ EU – but is doing better than both of them
The Democrats love to portray their Republican opponents as the tools of big business, but they themselves are up to their necks in big money politics
Within any particular policy context, the ‘blob’ is always where the most money is.
Perhaps what we’re seeing from young people is a disenchantment with the simplicities of both right and left.
An intriguing argument for ‘trickle-up’ economics
This technology was once the reserve of science fiction; now they have it Leicestershire.
The right often loses the political battle because it hasn’t bothered to fight the cultural battle
There is no intelligence without the mind and computers are fundamentally mindless
Getting rid of the carbon tax won’t stop Australia’s solar power revolution.
A thriving economy needs thriving domestic consumers