This site requires JavaScript for certain functions and interactions to work. Please turn on JavaScript for the best possible experience.
Newsletter sign-up
Follow us:
Speaking on the release of the Government’s Industrial Strategy, James Stewart, Vice Chair at KPMG UK said:
When the UK repatriates its trade policy, will it protect vested interests or deliver for consumers, asks Gail Orton.
The average worker will be £2,257 worse off by 2022, Jeremy Corbyn will claim today.
The City’s ability to adapt to change is one of its great strengths – but if it is to succeed after Brexit it must be given a coherent and clear framework, warns Jonathan Reynolds
Hundreds of thousand of Britons who file tax returns late will avoid £100 fines under changes being introduced by the Government.
The Law Commission has today published a new draft Bill to put the brake on unfair rules on logbook loans and usher in a new era of better protection for consumers.
A government minister has dismissed as "nonsense" suggestions that Britain wants to create an "empire 2.0" by boosting trade with Commonwealth nations after Brexit.
Britain's national debt will not return to its pre-crash level for another fifty years, the boss of a respected thinktank has declared.
Britain is on course for the longest fall in living standards since records began 60 years ago, experts warned today in the wake of Philip Hammond’s Autumn Budget.
Experts from professional services firm KPMG analyse Philip Hammond’s Budget announcements.
Howard Archer, chief economic advisor to the EY ITEM Club, comments on the Chancellor’s Budget.
Prominent Conservative MPs have backed Philip Hammond on his “make or break” Budget in a major relief for the Chancellor.
Philip Hammond has bowed to intense political pressure and announced a U-turn on the Government’s flagship Universal Credit programme.
The Chancellor delivered his Autumn Budget today. Read it in full here.
Philip Hammond has unveiled a major funding boost for the cash-strapped NHS - as the nation's finances were hammered by sluggish economic growth.
Chancellor Philip Hammond is laying out his fiscal plans to MPs as the state of the public finances is revealed.
Theresa May and Philip Hammond were reportedly at war last night over what was dubbed “the worst Budget build-up in history”.
Fiscal Phil is due at the Despatch Box shortly before 1pm tomorrow. Here are 15 things to look out for. Those in blue have already been announced.
We take a look at the key areas to look out for in Philip Hammond's Budget tomorrow - and what will be driving his decisions.
Money launderers hoping to infiltrate the profession continues to be a major problem, according to the autumn update of the Risk Outlook, published today.
The public spending deficit made a surprise jump last month in a fresh blow to Philip Hammond as he puts the finishing touches on his set piece Budget.
In a letter to the Chancellor, CEO of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales urges Hammond to stick to his commitment to reach a budget surplus by 2025.
The Government has agreed to give France more money to boost security in Calais, according to French officials.
Released today, lending and savings figures from the BSA show that building societies approved 29% of all new mortgages in Q3 2017, and savers deposited £1.3 billion in building society accounts.