Content tagged with "Nick Bosanquet,Economy,Economy" (15)
I was wrong to criticise Thatcher in 1981...
Reform’s Consultant Director Nick Bosanquet writes an op-ed in CityAM on the legacy of Baroness Thatcher.
Public sector leaders need to make a six-point...
The Guardian, Esther Cameron
The public sector starts at No 1 Easy Street
The Sunday Times, Robert Watts
2010: the year of competition
Reform's look at competition policy argues Government policy has weakened competition, and that this must be restored as an essential plank of the UK's return to economic growth
Road to recovery
Reform's report on the future of UK infrastructure
CII Thinkpiece Tackles 'Nudging' People...
Insurance Journal
Back to black
Reform's Budget 2009 paper
Personal capability: the alternative to...
A timely look at factors shaping the public's ability to take financial risk decisions, and argues that the very government regulation that is supposed to protect consumers might actually be quietly harming their ability to assess risk.
The hole we are in and how to get out of...
Reform's look at the public finances, exploring the dangers of fiscal stimulus and examining how a programme of public sector reform, combined with increased productivity in the private sector and for individuals, will lead the way out of recession.
A lost decade: Counting the opportunity...
The report shows that while the Government has pointed to strong growth during this period, 29 per cent of GDP growth has been generated by a bigger public sector.
Class of 2007: Inaction sinks the IPOD...
The report shows that while other countries are facing up to the economic challenge of ageing populations, the Government�s fiscal policies are mortgaging the future of a generation by failing to give young people room to invest in themselves.
Retreat from reform - The initial policy...
The report shows that initial decisions of Gordon Brown's Government have put public service reform into retreat. Policy announcements on the NHS, education and housing will increase public spending, reduce its efficiency and increase taxes significantly.
