News

New research from IPPR and More in Common reveals that the government has the public’s backing in delivering meaningful ...
Scrapping the two-child limit and benefit cap would lift 500,000 children out of poverty Fairer gambling taxes could raise the £3.2 billion needed to fully fund this, finds IPPR Tax changes would ...
Reacting to today’s decision by the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee to cut interest rates, Ashwin Kumar, director of research and policy at IPPR, said: “With growth reducing in the past ...
The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) is an independent charity working towards a fairer, greener, and more prosperous society.
New analysis of the government’s planned transport spending shows that, unless investment in the Northern Powerhouse goes ahead, London is set to receive almost 3 times more per person than the North; ...
Transport policy can make a material difference to people’s finances, especially those struggling to make ends meet. It can also help people better access the things they need – from work to education ...
Excluded children are the most vulnerable: twice as likely to be in the care of the state, four times more likely to have grown up in poverty, seven times more likely to have a special educational ...
Reliance on hotels has led to asylum accommodation and support costs soaring from £17,000 per person in 2019/20 to £41,000 in 2023/24 Muhammad said: “Asylum accommodation traps people in unhealthy, ...
Lowering tax on profits is not a ‘magic bullet’ to boost much-needed economic growth, says IPPR paper Despite a “race to the bottom” on corporation tax, UK business investment has been among lowest of ...
To help develop a path forward, IPPR held a series of multi-day deliberative workshops across the country - each exploring people’s understanding of health, its relationship with prosperity, and ...
Apprenticeships experts warn that the Treasury must be more transparent on how it spends the billions returned to its coffers Rigid apprenticeship system blamed for billions of skills funding going ...
Five years ago, Progressive Review published ‘The Social Contract in 21st Century Britain’. In our previous editorial, we opened by stating that “eight years of austerity have left our public services ...