Responding to the Chancellor's Spring Forecast, Louis Willis, Director of the Invest in Britain campaign, said:
Responding to the Chancellor's Spring Forecast, Louis Willis, Director of the Invest in Britain campaign, said:
The fiscal framework should be a tool to help the government achieve its growth objectives and ensure fiscal sustainability. It's time for a proper conversation about reforming it.
Here's what our director Louis Willis had to say β¬οΈ
Weβre pleased to be part of a group of thinktanks including
@goodgrowthfdn.bsky.social, Progress, @neweconomics.bsky.social, @womensbudgetgrp.bsky.social and others, calling on the Chancellor to reform the fiscal framework to allow for more public investment.
www.theguardian.com/business/202...
I am pleased to be in @labourlist.bsky.social this morning outlining the stark reality of the UKβs cost of living crisis and the very real threat it poses this government.
labourlist.org/2026/02/the-...
a graphic saying '63% say they have cut back on essentials because of the cost of living crisis', with some trollies illustrating the proportion.
Almost two thirds of people in the UK have cut back on essentials due to the cost of living. The crisis isnβt over β itβs getting worse.
Today we're launching the Cost of Living Action campaign, calling on the Government to end this crisis and ensure it never happens again.
This weekβs New Economy Brief goes a little deeper than your usual post-Budget summaries and asks: why are we in this mess and how do we get out of it? neweconomybrief.net/the-digest/w...
A decade of national renewal? Not exactly.
The chancellor's public investment plans don't come close to our historic investment levels.
Underinvestment has left us with sewage in our rivers, constant railway disruptions, crumbling schools and a shortage of hospital beds.
Responding to the Autumn Budget, Louis Willis, Director of the Invest in Britain campaign, said:
We brought the voices of 68,749 people to Downing Street todayπ£ - thank you to @richardburgon.bsky.social and @simonforstroud.bsky.social for joining us!
To everyone who signed, shared, or emailed their MP - thank you so much π
Fingers crossed for #TaxTheBanks in the Budget on Wednesday π€
NEW! How should Labour respond to the two key issues to voters of the economy and immigration and what are the electoral stakes this week of the budget?
Read on for our answer...
@nprcoxford.bsky.social @jrf-uk.bsky.social
Ramping up public investment is the best route out of the UKβs productivity crisis.
Our new report finds increasing public investment by an additional 2% of GDP per year would kickstart growth, raise average earnings, and strengthen the public finances.
inews.co.uk/news/politic...
Scrapping the cap entirely is both good policy *and* good politics.
Half measures will "save" some money short-term, but will piss *everybody* off and still leave very large numbers of children suffering from a policy designed to make them poorer.
inews.co.uk/news/politic...
This was excellent. Iβve been trying to put my finger on what is making UK politics feel so airless at the moment and I think a big part of it is the futurelessness that Mulgan diagnoses here.
Late period Osborne: interest rates at zero and 50-80bn of headroom: and his priority was βdonβt investβ.
Responding to the Chancellor's speech, Louis Willis, Director of the Invest in Britain campaign, said:
Government has published one of those quiet but important documents that might get overlooked as it is not 'newsy'. The headline finding is that Β£1 of public R&D investment generates Β£8 in net economic benefits for the UK over the long term
www.gov.uk/government/p...
Enjoyed this wide-ranging discussion across fiscal + monetary policy and the links between them. Great to hear clarity and challenge on subjects that are too often mystified and naturalised.
Great new research that is worth a read for anyone interested in the politics of fiscal policy.
For me, two key takeaways:
- Voters will punish Labour for failing on child poverty, whatever they say about two-child limit as standalone policy
- Voters love wealth taxes, even when framed negatively
The wealth gap between rich and poor increased by over 50% from 2011 to 2021, to over Β£11.5 trillion. Find out more about the impacts on our society, economy, democracy and environment, and what we can do about it, from our updated Wealth Gap Risk Register.
Great story illustrating how legacies of under-investment and privatisation have fed into current crises in cost of living and local govt finances.
Action in Brighton sounds promising too but national govt needs to do more to support scaling these kind of solutions.
Labour MPs want the Chancellor to go beyond fiscal tinkering at the upcoming Budget.
New polling reveals a majority of Labour MPs (52%) think the Chancellor should raise taxes to fund more spending & investment rather than just to meet her fiscal rules: labourlist.org/2025/10/labo...
This week's New Economy Brief looks at the crisis in local government funding - its roots, its consequences and possible solutions:
neweconomybrief.net/the-digest/c...
Iβm tempted to say Heath. But perhaps thatβs because Iβve just finished @tommctague.bsky.socialβs excellent book on the UK relationship to European integration and Heath seems the last Tory leader not caught up in the delusion or ambivalence (or both) about Europe that was so crucial to downfall.
Canβt believe I didnβt know about this, massive news
Sof has managed to write about patriotism with a sense of humour and while avoiding cringe earnestness on the one hand or derision on the other.
In carrying off this near-impossible feat she has perfectly embodied the culture sheβs writing about here. Enjoyed this very much.
Responding to the Chancellor's speech at the Labour Party Conference today, Louis Willis, Director of the Invest in Britain campaign, said:
Hope this doesnβt prove to be the case. The government has talked a good game on exactly this kind of infrastructure investment - now it needs to deliver.
And coming just before Liverpool conference would be all too reminiscent of Sunak on HS2 in Manchester 2023.
www.bbc.com/news/article...
What was in the US-UK Tech Prosperity deal? How does it fit into wider trade negotiations with the US? And what are the implications of conceding to the demands of the βBig Techβ lobby? We explore all this and more in this week's New Economy Brief: neweconomybrief.net/the-digest/t...
To deliver the stability you have rightly emphasised, you must find additional tax revenue at the coming Budget. There are progressive, pro-growth options available if the government is willing to undertake more fundamental reforms to the tax system. Above all, the tax and pension system needs to be rebalanced so that better-off older people, especially those with substantial property and pension wealth, make a much larger contribution to addressing the fiscal pressures that result from increasing spend on the NHS, social care and pensions. These and other pressures on public spending must also be managed in a more sustainable way.
Higher investment, sustainable spending, raise taxes/reform pensions so better-off older people pay their share.
Advice for the Chancellor from Gus O'Donnell, @mazzucatom.bsky.social, Jim O'Neill, @uofgvc.bsky.social @elerianm.bsky.social, @sjwrenlewis.bsky.social & me.
archive.ph/I9PVc#select...