The Centre for Social Justice, which I am now chairing once again, is turning its attention to the quality of growth and jobs.
The second piece in our mini-series on the Autumn Statement, which takes place a week from today.
She needs the larger majority that a poll would deliver if she is to achieve her programme at a time of pre-Brexit turbulence.
It is not so much a location where goods and services can be sold, but rather a system of political control.
It’s time to defend and promote the ideas that have helped to bring globalisation – and in turn brought more wealth, peace and opportunity to billions of people.
There has been huge investment in physical capital. But meanwhile, the effort to revitalise our human capital has been fragmented, centralised and half-hearted.
There is a trade-off between the long-term interest of the economy and the short-term interest of many Leave voters.
We still see cases where there is a fundamental disconnect between British foreign policy and British aid. Today, the most perverse example of this lies in Yemen.
A Canadian-British trade agreement will take considerably less time than the current Comprehensive Economic Trade Agreement (CETA) between Canada and the EU.
What will replace the surplus target?
Osborne launches his new think-tank today, and the project that he championed will continue – though with differences.
Achieving the right Brexit deal is the key. This would be a good deal easier if everyone agreed what the right deal looked like.
It is over a year since the Independent Airports Commission backed the development. The Government should implement the recommendation.
Both consumer price inflation and higher interest rates are needed.
Quietly, public support for getting on with delivering Leave will continue to swell.