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Browsing: Rachel Reeves
Ministers refuse to rule out hike to employer national insurance rate The Chancellor and business secretary have again refused to…
Reeves hails £63bn boost for Britain at flagship investment summit Ministers have hailed £63bn worth of investment into the UK…
Many of Tuesday’s papers provide coverage of the latest hint from Chancellor Rachel Reeves that employers’ national insurance contributions could go up in the Budget.
The trial of Urfan Sharif makes several tabloid front pages, as he admitted to police that he had killed his ten-year-old daughter.
Labour MPs urge Reeves to spend tens of billions more on ailing public services Summarize this content to 100 words…
Trending News Inspiration Papers News that Matters Impact on your life Good News Greece players pay tribute to George Baldock…
Row over claims Rachel Reeves could hike capital gains tax as high as 39% Rachel Reeves is being warned that…
Will Rachel Reeves’s rules on debt and spending survive the budget? The chancellor desperately needs more money to finance growth…
The topic The Facts The UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves appeared at the Labour Party conference earlier in the week in…
“In the standard textbook model that Reeves would have learned at Oxford and the London School of Economics in the late 1990s, business investment is a reward for governments that behave nicely. Investors want low tax rates, flexible markets and, above all, stability. Any hint of an increase in borrowing and they will spook, worrying that government debt will spiral out of control. In this kind of model, even austerity can be expansionary, as it demonstrates to the business community that the fiscal authorities are really committed, even at the expense of electoral pain.”
“While Reeves may have been shocked by the detail of the public finances, and her outrage at Tory mismanagement wholly justified, her performance was largely planned in advance. The broad fiscal picture was known before the election. This was all part of a political strategy to temper public expectations, affix blame to the Conservatives and instil patience in her own MPs. It is also likely that the tax rises she implied were unnecessary during the election, but will announce in October, have long been known to her.”
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