Give business a break: Why the chancellor’s Budget should prioritise stability over radicalism March 14, 2016 The chancellor faces an important choice this week, as he delivers his fourth big fiscal plan in 12 months. It comes down to a choice between yet another radical Budget – with all the uncertainty and disruption that may cause for businesses – or a steadier approach that gives firms and the government itself the [...]
With the Budget looming, has George Osborne missed his chance to balance the books? March 14, 2016 Kallum Pickering, senior UK economist at Berenberg, says Yes. As if he ever had much of a chance in the first place. If the precedent of consistently missing his targets year after year isn’t enough, the numbers speak loud and clear. In the first 10 months of this fiscal year, George Osborne has rattled through 90 [...]
Why don’t Manchester United have a women’s team? It’s a business no-brainer for Ed Woodward and the Glazers March 11, 2016 An Official Digital Transformation Partner, an Official Paint Provider, an Official Global Noodle Partner… the list goes on. Manchester United’s commercial team are experts at milking cash from the club’s global reach and appeal. It seems that everything and anything that can be sponsored at Old Trafford already is, yet still United continue to unveil [...]
The UK is the sport industry capital of the world – its businesses must lead the way with corporate responsibility March 11, 2016 In case you hadn’t noticed, the UK is sport mad. We watch, discuss, engage and play sport with great passion. So it’s not surprising that we are pretty damn good at the business of sport as well. Led by the Barclays Premier League we have an industry worth an estimated £24bn per year. But more [...]
Buy-to-let tax changes: A perfect storm for landlords and tenants March 11, 2016 Upcoming tax changes have ignited debate about the role private landlords should play in meeting the UK’s housing needs. Focus has fallen on buy-to-let but, as the Institute for Fiscal Studies, among others, has noted, landlords are taxed much less favourably than home owners. Following last year’s Autumn Statement, which outlined plans for an additional [...]
The EU has left it too late to do the right thing over the refugee crisis – and now Brexit looks like the less risky option March 11, 2016 Angela Merkel was cast as the heroine of the refugee crisis last year, bravely throwing open Germany’s borders to desperate masses attempting to cross the Mediterranean. By contrast, David Cameron and the UK more broadly was cast as the villain. Lurid (and false) claims we had taken in only around 200 refugees added colour to [...]
Is the proposed price cap for pre-pay customers an unwelcome intervention in the energy market? March 11, 2016 Tim Worstall, senior fellow of the Adam Smith Institute, and author of Chasing Rainbows: Economic Myths, Environmental Facts, says Yes. Of course the Competition and Markets Authority’s (CMA) intervention is unwelcome: any price fixing whenever would be. The entire point of a market economy is that prices change to balance supply and demand. Price fixing, by [...]
Trust London Stock Exchange shareholders to make right decision over Deutsche Boerse bid March 10, 2016 The clock is ticking on what could be the final bourse mega-merger for a very long time. Certainly, if Deutsche Boerse succeeds in its bid to combine forces with the London Stock Exchange, it will create a European behemoth to rival American giant CME group. This outcome would leave the financial world with four enormous [...]
Business and the unions: We both back a third Heathrow runway – now get on with it March 10, 2016 We often read in the press about the latest bust-up between the unions and the business community. Yet there are any number of policies we agree on, especially those that help to deliver high-skilled quality employment and sustainable growth. Equally, we both get disappointed when the government falls short of the mark, particularly when the [...]
It’s Waterloo for the global economy – and we’re dangerously lacking reinforcements March 10, 2016 What has 1815 and the Battle of Waterloo got to do with 2016 and the world economy? On 18 June 1815, the Duke of Wellington could feel the battle slipping away, but he also knew the Prussians under General Blucher were coming and that could win the day. Fast forward to 2016 and there is no [...]