The VAT cut may have been economically and electorally irrelevant, but might all these interest rate cuts deliver for Gordon Brown? History will be made tomorrow when the Bank of England cuts rates to the lowest in its 315-year history - probably by half a point, to 1.5%. And even that will probably fall to 1% before Easter. A friend emails to say he has become a "reluctant buyer of Gordon Brown stock" - his mates are getting cheap mortgage deals, at 4% or 4.5%, saving hundreds a month. This will create a feelgood...
Michael Kaiser makes some good arguments in favor of increased arts funding, but unfortunately he mixes them up with bad ones, and he glosses over the best ones. The result is that Tyler Cowen gets to take the moral high ground by saying that "culture for the rich" is "not a priority".
In reality, however, arts funding is a great way of spending any stimulus money, as anybody with a pocket calculator to hand might be able to work out from a couple of the numbers in Kaiser's piece:
...The arts in the United
Lordy, more annoucements on yet another layer of bureaucracy to weigh down companies during the recession:
The government's equalities office is drawing up an amendment to the equality bill that would force companies to publish figures in annual accounts showing the number of men and women in particular pay bands. The bill is due to be published early this year.
More than just more bureaucracy: it's actually meaningless. Without knowing what jobs the various different people are doing we can't tell whether this means equal pay or not. For we do indeed have a...
There's a piece at CiF which I think rather fails in its major premise.
At the dawn of the digital era, during this first decade of the 21st century, the most important new commodity is internet access. A growing canon of research has documented the enormous benefits that accrue to those with broadband access (and the increasing detriments faced by those without it). Within many civil societies, in much the same way the agrarian revolution helped eliminate famine, the industrial revolution brought manufactured goods into everyone's lives and the computer era integrated machines (from laptops to PDAs...
Overview Alex Brummer says hope lies in Keynesian fiscal policies on both sides of the Atlantic, plus a weaker pound
After the nationalisation of large parts of the UK banking system and emergency recapitalisations of the rest of it, investors have seen the value of their bank shares shrink
Richard Northedge says accountants who specialise in troubled companies will be the new masters of the financial universe this winter
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