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:
Given the epidemic of precarious work in the UK, this report simply does not go far enough in fixing a broken system.
Commenting on today’s release of the Taylor Review into Modern Working Practices, the NASUWT has expressed great disappointment at its failure to address the on-going exploitation of thousands of UK supply teachers by many employment agencies, whose practices continue to deny them access to their deserved employment rights and fair levels of pay.
The Community Investment Coalition and Responsible Finance have responded to Lord Holmes' article on inclusivity and funding of Fintech.
The race to succeed Andrew Tyrie as chair of the Treasury Select Committee is hotly contested. Below the candidates make their case for taking on one of the most powerful roles in Parliament.
Fintech has the opportunity to be 'illustrative and enabling of inclusion', says Lord Holmes.
IPSE’s Director of Policy Simon McVicker reacts to Frank Field MP’s open letter to PoliticsHome about the ‘gig economy’.
Drivers working with Uber are at risk of taking home as little as £2 an hour, less than a third of the National Living Wage, says Frank Field MP.
David Cameron has accused politicians calling on the Government to increase public spending of being "selfish" for wanting to spend money the country does not have.
If Northern Ireland is to make the most of its talent pool, a quality apprenticeship system is paramount, writes David Simpson
Robert Halfon has been blasted by Oxfam after he suggested ministers cut back on overseas aid spending in order to up the wages of low paid public sector workers in Britain.
David Cameron vetoed proposals to scrap copper coins amid fears the move would "scare" the public, it has been revealed.
HVM Catapult hosted a parliamentary event to mark the 5th anniversary of its establishment with the ultimate aim to significantly grow the contribution of the manufacturing sector to the UK economy.
Short-term uncertainty from the General Election result has caused a deterioration of consumer confidence in the housing market, according to a report from the Building Societies Association out today.
A key minister in David Cameron’s government has called on Theresa May and Philip Hammond to increase taxes to fund higher spending on public services.
Support for tax rises to fund more public spending is at its highest level since 2004, a major survey has found.
New research undertaken for the Council of Mortgage Lenders in conjunction with the Building Societies Association (BSA) says that it is vital to adopt a more joined up approach to delivering advice to older borrowers, and to narrow the gap between mainstream lifetime mortgage advice silos.
The Council of Mortgage Lenders estimates that gross mortgage lending reached £20.1 billion in May.
One of the clear policy priorities for the sustainable resource community is certainty over Brexit, says Policy Connect.
In light of today’s Queen’s Speech, the Personal Finance Society welcomes the Government’s decision to put the FCA in charge of regulating claims management companies. The FCA has the resources needed to enforce the existing regulation.
Government borrowing fell by £0.3bn in May compared to last year, and to its lowest level since the global financial crash, new figures have revealed.
Philip Hammond today said the Conservatives need to win over a public “weary” of austerity to the cause of fiscal conservatism.
The Chartered Insurance Institute (CII) is launching a new level three Certificate in London Market Insurance for those working in or conducting business through the London Market.
Responsible Finance have outlined the policies they would like to see included in the Queen's Speech.
Ministers will no longer get sight of official statistics before they are released to the public.