Hints and tips:
...Alfie Stirling, chief economist at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said that for many in less secure industries, “the worst may be still to come” as higher interest rates prompt companies to cut jobs....
...Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at the University of Cambridge: Worse....
...Look not only at their grand town halls but also at the vast Italianate northern mills or the 150 years’ worth of capacity Joseph Bazalgette built for London’s sewers. How did they do that?...
...It’s the phenomenon most likely to see 2022 end on an optimistic note,” said Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at Cambridge university....
...Diane Coyle: The UK is in a structural hole, not a cyclical downturn....
...Britain has a bigger hill to climb than others because its economy suffered more in the early stages of the pandemic — a fact that Diane Coyle, professor at Cambridge university, ascribed partly to “indecisive...
...Diane Coyle: Most people will feel worse off in a year’s time....
...Diane Coyle: Probably, but it will also probably be too soon....
...said Diane Coyle, professor of public policy at Cambridge....
...Nobel Laureates Joseph Stiglitz and Amartya Sen as well as economist Paul Fitoussi pioneered this thinking in a 2009 report commissioned by then-French president Nicolas Sarkozy....
...Diane Coyle, Bennett professor of public policy, University of Cambridge Significantly. It already is of course....
...David Piling, the FT’s Africa editor and Joseph Cotterill, southern Africa correspondent, have written a long-read on the ’slow motion coup’ here....
...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....
...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....
...Joseph Pearlman, professor of macroeconomics, City University, London Possibly as high as 2 per cent....
...Joseph Pearlman, professor of macroeconomics, City University, London I cannot see that happening at the moment....
...The exemplar must be Joseph Bazalgette, the engineer who built London’s sewerage system in the 1860s, with more than 100 years’ worth of capacity....
...Roger Coyle, a partner at Fair Oaks, which manages a fund that invests in US and European CLOs, said: “It’s not as big an underlying loan market [in Europe] as in the US so it’s not possible to be as diversified...
...Ashwin Kumar, Chief Economist, Joseph Rowntree Foundation The OBR’s relatively pessimistic forecast for GDP growth is most likely to be right....
...Diane Coyle, Professor of Economics, University of Manchester More pessimistic than 12 months ago....
...“As long as that difference between the loan yield and the CLO financing remains attractive, the attractiveness of CLOs isn’t affected,” says Roger Coyle, partner at Fair Oaks, a credit manager that invests...
...Joseph Pearlman, professor of economics, City University He has wisely moved away from Osborne’s austerity policy....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester To 3-4%....
...Diane Coyle, professor of economics, University of Manchester Slower growth will reduce immigration anyway....
...Joseph Pearlman, professor of economics, City University More pessimistic than 12 months ago Last year I thought we would remain in the EU....
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