Hints and tips:
...French artist Diane Dal-pra strips back traditional motifs into almost abstract form, where a chignon of hair and planes of fabric allude to the figure....
...Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge: Worse....
...Diane Coyle: Probably, but it will also probably be too soon....
...“Mr Johnson has just recreated a cliff-edge, no-deal Brexit since the election,” warned Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge....
...The writer is the FT’s chief economics commentator Diane Coyle The discipline suffers from its lack of diversity The debate about the state of economics is a bit surreal, to an economist....
...Diane Coyle: Worse....
...Sign up to receive FirstFT by email here Donald Trump fired the acting US attorney-general Sally Yates on Monday night for defying his controversial travel ban, even as he faced growing protests against...
...Tony Yates, consultant/blogger Like the BoE and other commentators, the labour market has surprised me continually. I suppose another year of flat real wages....
...“Before the crisis the [macroeconomic forecasting] models were hopeless” said Diane Coyle, professor at Manchester University....
...Brexit will crimp supply side growth as well as demand so [there is] not much of an output gap left to justify exceptional accommodation Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester The...
...Tony Yates, consultant/blogger Flat productivity since 2008 has been a terrible shock....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of Economics, University of Manchester Inflation may be lower — assuming the pound doesn’t lurch down again — but unemployment may start creeping higher....
...Tony Yates, Consultant/blogger I would guess about 1-1.5 per cent growth....
...Tony Yates, consultant/blogger Feel about the same as 12 months ago....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester Nothing the government has done will affect housing supply. Almost all their policies have tended to boost demand and therefore prices....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester It's time to normalise. Ultra-low policy rates are distorting asset and savings markets....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester He will more or less be able to cut spending as planned in the next year; further ahead it depends on the political reaction....
...Tony Yates, Professor of Economics, University of Birmingham; Centre for Macroeconomics at the LSE That would be my central expectation, of another year of OK growth....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester As above. The failure to build enough homes is a massive running sore on the economy....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of economics, University of Manchester A Brexit vote would not do much in the short term but the medium term damage would be serious....
...Diane Coyle, Enlightenment Economics Unemployment isn’t too far above the levels of the early 2000s....
...Tony Yates, Bristol University The last Government announced a ‘deficit reduction come what may’ plan, and, sensibly, reneged when tax revenues came in much weaker....
...Diane Coyle, Enlightenment Economics Not short term, although the long term differences in outlook under various scenarios would be huge....
...Tony Yates, Bristol University I’m assuming that productivity will rebound as the recovery recovers, and so we should get to see more consistent aggregate real wage growth....
...Tony Yates, Bristol University Yes, but not stellar. I expect that the oil price fall will be a big boost to real incomes....
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