Poverty, personal debt, profiteering and tax avoidance – The economy in 2018
In 2018, a fifth of Brits remain in poverty
In 2018, a fifth of Brits remain in poverty
Legal and human rights groups around the country celebrated the announcement.
Why was the new Work and Pensions boss’ first Parliamentary statement to reject the United Nation’s findings on poverty?
Philip Alston said the government’s welfare changes and council cuts are causing “misery”
As dozens of schools are found to suspend 1 in 5 pupils, Jennette Arnold AM argues we need massive investment turn it around.
The ‘socio-economic duty’ is already in law – it just needs to be enacted. There’s no time to waste, write Just Fair’s Dr Koldo Casla and Imogen Richmond-Bishop.
Two new studies by the Social Metrics Commission and the New Economics Foundation reveal the extent to which David Cameron and Theresa May have wrecked havoc in Britain’s wallets.
Following Natalie Bennett’s argument for a universal basic income, Karen Buck MP and Declan Gaffney argue there is an easier, more practical option.
Scotland is now running trials on implementing a universal basic income. And the initiative should be rolled across Britain, Natalie Bennett writes.
Social and economic inequality are not affecting our pockets, but our nation’s mental health too. Kate Pickett and Richard Wilkinson write.