Hints and tips:
...Best of all is Naomi Watts who stars as Babe Paley: the swan Capote had the closest relationship with and the one he hurt the most by disclosing her marital woes....
...Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge: Worse....
...Diane Coyle: The UK is in a structural hole, not a cyclical downturn....
...Diane Coyle: Most people will feel worse off in a year’s time....
...Diane Coyle: Probably, but it will also probably be too soon....
...Diane Coyle: Worse....
...Naomi Watts plays Jean Holloway, a chilly New York psychotherapist with an adorable highflying husband (Billy Crudup) and tiny tomboy daughter Dolly....
...David Cobham, professor, Heriot-Watt University Very little....
...Annie Hall Woody Allen’s 1977 heroine, played by Diane Keaton, is still the ultimate in androgynous chic....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester I have no idea as I don’t understand why the average increase has been so low so far....
...David Cobham, professor of economics, Heriot Watt University There is no good reason to expect any serious change in the UK’s poor productivity performance....
...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...
...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....
...David Cobham, professor of economics, Heriot Watt University Positively but slowly, 1-2 per cent = less than most other ‘advanced’ economies; mainly the result of years of misguided austerity since 2010...
...David Cobham, professor of economics, Heriot-Watt University Feel about the same as 12 months ago....
...David Cobham, professor of economics, Heriot-Watt University To the 2% target, maybe a bit above but not too much. Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester To 3-4%....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester It depends how seriously the Government takes the geography of the Brexit vote....
...(much of which will be due to prior, and not to be repeated, depreciation) Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester The MPC could be starting to have to think of rate rises later...
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester Slower growth will reduce immigration anyway....
...Frances Cairncross, chair of court, Heriot-Watt University More optimistic than 12 months ago It depends, of course, on the length of the long term....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester It will harm every economy, because of geopolitical instability if nothing else....
...David Cobham, professor of economics, Heriot-Watt University Significantly, but not necessarily to below zero, as investment falls and exports fail to plug the gap....
...David Cobham, Professor of economics, Heriot-Watt University Very little effect. They — and UK society — have not yet grasped the nettle, and house prices will continue to rise albeit more slowly....
...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....
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