Ed Miliband has many challenges – but the spending review isn’t one of them

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George Osborne’s immediate priorities shouldn’t distract Labour, which instead must focus on how it plans to cut the deficit Whether Labour matches the spending totals set out by George Osborne in the spending review is deemed to be one of the most significant questions in British politics and the sternest test yet of Ed Miliband‘s leadership. But like many self-evident truths that … Continued

Matthew Whittaker

The ticking debt bomb?

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This blog originally appeared on Public Finance When the financial crisis first hit, politicians of all parties talked up the notion of ‘rebalancing’ the economy, moving away from a growth model dependent on financial services, house price increases and consumption and towards one based on the real economy and on trade. Five years on and, with … Continued

Labour’s recovery position

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To assert that the next general election will be about living standards is now a commonplace in Westminster, even a cliche. Say it and people nod along. But precisely what this means – the progress the public thinks is possible, the purchase they believe political parties have on the main policy issues – remains rather hazy. Some … Continued

There’s no single, simple solution to low pay

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Another year, another drop. The odds are that the impending announcement on the new rate for the national minimum wage will see a further decline in its real value, meaning a lost decade for those on the lowest pay. Wages right across the earnings spectrum have fallen, so many experts will greet this news with a shrug. But that’s unlikely … Continued

Keeping it real

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Trends in real wages under the new inflation measures Last month’s ONS Consumer Price Inflation release for February 2013 included for the first time two new inflation index series, the RPIJ (1997-2012) and the CPIH (2005-2012). These new measures have been introduced in response to concerns with the current RPI and CPI measures respectively. RPIJ  … Continued

The great tax swindle

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In the week when the meaning of austerity hits home for many, the one big coalition giveaway comes in the form of the rapidly rising personal tax allowance. Any criticism about cuts to tax credits or benefits is met with the same ministerial retort: just look at the size of our tax reductions for those on low … Continued

The Pay Squeeze Just Got Tighter and Longer

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This post originally appeared on James’s Huffington Post blog As always, it’s the policy pronouncements that attract the attention on Budget day. A cheap pint is much more interesting than the minutiae of OBR figures. But the big story on Wesndesday in terms of its impact on households didn’t come from the Chancellor but from Robert … Continued

Matthew Whittaker

The wage squeeze

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The OBR’s latest projections for average earnings and inflation suggest that the wage squeeze will look worse over the next few years than previously feared: wages will fall further relative to prices and recover more slowly. Our analysis of the OBR figures shows that the situation is even starker for the ‘typical’ worker – those … Continued

Budget 2013: the new childcare support excludes families who most need help

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In a time of austerity, why is extra money being directed towards families earning £300,000, and not those on universal credit? The centrepiece of the budget will be a new system of tax-free childcare vouchers (deliberately misnamed tax relief by the government) for middle- and higher-income families. Of the nearly £1bn earmarked for childcare, £750m is going … Continued

Matthew Whittaker

Easing the squeeze: a tax cut for all?

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In the run up to today’s Budget, it has been widely reported that the Chancellor is set to announce a further above-inflation increase in the personal tax allowance – the amount that an individual can earn before becoming liable for income tax – meaning that it will reach the £10,000 target that the Government previously … Continued

What does the childcare announcement really tell us?

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This post originally appeared on Gavin’s New Statesman blog Before we rush to dissect the government’s new childcare policy it is worth pausing to reflect on the very fact that in an unprecedented time of austerity a Conservative-led administration is proposing to spend near on £1bn on childcare. There are all sorts of caveats and problems … Continued

Squeezed Middle: a wake-up call

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This blog originally appeared on Public Finance In the UK, low and middle income families face flatlining or falling living standards. But the so-called ‘squeezed middle’ is under even greater pressure in the US. What can we learn? New analysis of the ‘squeezed middle’ in America and Britain, launched today by the Resolution Foundation, raises some important pointers … Continued

Transatlantic lessons for middle Britain

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This blog originally appeared on Bright Blue Today sees the launch of ‘The Squeezed Middle: the pressure on ordinary workers in America and Britain’ – a collection of essays from America’s leading thinkers in the field of living standards to understand what lessons, if any, we might draw from the US experience. You may well wonder what we … Continued

Matthew Whittaker

Keeping it private

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Despite the sluggish economic recovery, employment figures continue to surprise on the upside. With the public sector rapidly being cut back, all of this employment growth is of course coming from the private sector. But what does the picture look like across the different parts of the UK? The green bars in the chart below show … Continued

Retirement trends in the UK

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We aren’t saving enough for retirement. This was one of the findings presented in Resolution Foundation’s recent audit of low to middle income households, Squeezed Britain, which showed that a massive 69 per cent of low to middle income households do not have a pension. Across all income groups the proportion failing to save for a … Continued

The end of pledge-card politics?

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This post originally appeared on Gavin’s New Statesman blog The next election will see a battered electorate in need of economic and social respite confronted by a political elite woefully lacking in resources and public trust. Never in recent times will so much be asked from leaders who have so little to respond with. The result … Continued

Matthew Whittaker

Never had it so squeezed

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This post orginally appeared on Public Finance Even in the boom years, a large proportion of the population never shared the proceeds of growth. That’s even less likely today as austerity really hits home Mired as we are in a fifth year of economic crisis and austerity, it’s easy to forget that not long ago we’d … Continued

The coalition’s welfare cuts mean a dramatic rise in council tax for the poorest

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This article originally appeared on the New Statesman The decision to reduce the budget for council tax support by 10 per cent means low-income households face a tax increase of up to £600. Accustomed to the inflated claims of successive governments, readers might be forgiven for rolling their eyes at the phrase “radical welfare reform”. Yet … Continued

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