Chancellor criticises BBC presenter after he said British economy was ‘ravaged by economic shocks’ and ‘stagnant’

Amol Rajan may have been understating the problems facing Britain in his question to Jeremy Hunt this morning (see 10.33am), if the Institute for Fiscal Studies’s assessment is anything to go by.

This is how Paul Johnson, the IFS director, opened his speech at the IFS presentation where its experts have been explaining the significance of what was announced yesterday.

Nothing that Jeremy Hunt did yesterday, nor anything the OBR said, changes anything very significantly. Which is a shame. Because that means we are still:

-heading for a parliament in which people will on average be worse off at the end than at the start,

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

UK to invest £900m in supercomputer in bid to build own ‘BritGPT’

Treasury announces plans for exascale computer so as not to risk losing…

UK economy shrank faster than first thought as real household incomes fall – business live

Updated official data shows UK GDP contracted by 0.3% in July-September, worse…

A wordless death, a dazzling new talent and a 50-day squat: is Athens the hotbed of European theatre?

Thirty directors from all over Europe converged on Greece for a showcase…

Hunt under fire for using lobby group data to shield private schools from £1.7bn VAT

Experts attack claim that 90,000 pupils would be forced into state schools…