We should seek the closest possible relationship with the EU and an open trade policy. Firms need confidence to invest.
The really interesting question is: what causes wealth? And the answer is clear enough – specialisation and exchange.
Individually, migrants can come to embody these values better than many on the Left who were born here. But the evidence suggests that this takes time.
Put harshly, it can be the ideology of the free-rider, the citizen who neglects the demands of citizenship.
First, that Leave had won dishonestly. Second, that the country had become more racist. Third, that the 52 per cent had wrecked the economy.
We cannot afford to get it wrong. The Prime Minister is the right woman to go out to bat for Britain. She will deliver a strong deal and a bright future for everyone.
A joint response to our series on WTO by a former Director-General of that organisation and a former Australian Ambassador to it – via Policy Exchange.
Its permit system places the island’s residents at the centre of policy – and can be tightened up, just as just it was in 2009, if the economy is squeezed.
We can build a Britain that is fair on immigration, trades globally and is outward-looking – underpinned by great values of equality, fairness and freedom.
“Let us renew the relationship that can lead the world towards the promise of freedom and prosperity marked out by those ordinary citizens 240 years ago.”
It should be used to pay for what we owe in our pensions and benefits system – and thus provide more inter-generational justice.
If the Business Secretary wants to become the man for enterprise, he needs to challenge his own bureaucrats.
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.
The challenge for aid donors and recipients alike is to work together to improve its efficiency and effectiveness.