We are more likely to provide opportunities to lower paid British workers and to grow the economy as a whole if we vote for Brexit.
A ConservativeHome mini-series begins today.
“And here I’m sitting with a 19 year old girl who’d no aspiration and no self-worth. My point was: what could we do to change her life?”
The New National Living Wage comes into effect today. And over the next seven days, we will deliver tax cuts, help for savers and the single-tier state pension.
Home working is on the rise. Self-employment is on the rise. Part-time labour is on the rise. Osborne should heed the downsides as well as the benefits.
Earlier this week, Bright Blue published its report “Standing Alone?” which focuses on self-employed individuals who are in low income households.
The Commons should not reject this Lords amendment to the Welfare Reform Bill.
The Prime Minister’s recent speech on life chances focused on more support for children and families.
You’re then four or five years ahead of a graduate, already knowledgeable about the role and the business, and you’ve been earning all the while.
The second piece in our mini-series on whether the Chancellor is achieving the rebalancing of the economy he wants.
In some ways, it’s too early to tell. But the question is worth probing because it matters.
The Government’s ambition to halve the disability employment gap is a weighty one. But it can be done.
There are negative possibilities for the supply of jobs, positive ones for productivity – and a lot of variation across sections.