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Putting social mobility on the agenda. A speech by Alison McGovern MP
The SMF hosted a speech and discussion with Alison McGovern MP, Shadow Minister for Employment on the 27 April 2023. This is the speech in full, with Alison sharing her vision for the years ahead and how to ensure opportunities are spread evenly across the country.
Published: | 02 May 2023 |
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All work and no play? Cultural participation should become a key focus for social mobility
Social mobility is rarely – if ever – measured by looking at the social and cultural divides between the rich and poor. However, as John Asthana Gibson argues, if the government is serious about their social mobility agenda, it should focus on building our children’s social and cultural capital.
Published: | 26 April 2023 |
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Author: | John Asthana Gibson |
Horses for courses: Betting taxes should fund gambling addiction treatment, not just horseracing
Protests against this year's Grand National have drawn sharp attention to the horse racing industry. That the government subsidises the industry by taxing betting profits raises questions about why such a levy isn't in place to use to treat problem gambling.
Published: | 17 April 2023 |
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Author: | Aveek Bhattacharya |
Priming the (heat) pumps: Can the Roadmap help us reach net zero?
The Government’s Heat Pump Investment Roadmap is a late addition to the mass of ‘Green Day’ announcements. Whilst the commitment to heat pumps is clear and welcome, the reliance on private investment may be overly optimistic, argues Niamh O Regan.
Published: | 13 April 2023 |
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Author: | Niamh O Regan |
Social Tariffs and the Social Market
In this essay, SMF Director James Kirkup reflects on the merits and failures of markets, whilst looking forward towards work we’re doing with Citizens Advice, exploring what we can do when markets don’t deliver the social benefits we expect of them.
Published: | 31 March 2023 |
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Author: | James Kirkup |
Any new fuel duty cut is another giveaway to the rich
Many of those who support fuel duty cuts say they are justified because they give financial help to people who can barely make ends meet. In fact, as Gideon Salutin shows, fuel duty is mostly paid by the better off, meaning cutting it is little more than a tax cut for the rich, often funded by cutting services that are used by the poor.
Published: | 12 March 2023 |
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Author: | Gideon Salutin |
Caught out: Trends in police pay in the UK
Police pay in the UK has declined substantially in real terms since 2000, making the police an outlier among similar occupational roles and among public sector workers more widely. If this were to continue, as Shreya Nanda shows, it would mean a further 4 per cent real-terms decline in by 2027.
Published: | 09 March 2023 |
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Author: | Shreya Nanda |
Marcus Bokkerink, Chair of the Competition and Markets Authority, speech to SMF
The SMF hosted a speech and discussion with Marcus Bokkerink, Chair of the CMA, on 28th February 2023. This is the speech in full, on the importance of competition, misconceptions about it, and on the implications for the CMA's work and for policymakers.
Published: | 28 February 2023 |
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Why this fuel duty freeze is different
Rishi Sunak’s government has repeatedly committed itself to fiscal responsibility. Yet that rhetoric of discipline is at odds with reports that Chancellor Jeremy Hunt is considering the largest unfunded fuel duty cut in British history.
Published: | 08 February 2023 |
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Author: | Gideon Salutin |