Transport isn’t working for people. It is also not living up to its potential in supporting the government’s missions. The ...
The pressing social and economic challenge posed by wealth inequality in the UK is today freshly analysed in a new Institute for Public Policy Research paper. Wealth, which is increasingly accumulated ...
An insight into why we might privilege social justice, over criminal justice Prison does not only impact and harm those who are directly locked up; prisons affect all of us. Yet many of us don’t ...
Restoring NHS productivity to pre-pandemic levels would have freed £19 billion more in 2023/24, enough to build a new health centre in almost every neighbourhood NHS could unlock £3.8 billion a year ...
IPPR has responded to the government’s plans for pension reforms, to be set out in Rachel Reeves’ Mansion House speech on Thursday evening. Dr George Dibb, associate director for economic policy at ...
The Office for Budgetary Responsibility has outlined a new approach to modelling the growth impacts of public investment. Unlike before, this allows them to better reflect the economic benefits of ...
Reacting to today’s decision by the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee Carsten Jung, head of macroeconomics at IPPR, said: "Given low inflation and slow growth, the Bank of England should ...
The independent Lord Darzi Review aims to examine the state of quality in health and care services on the NHS’s 70th birthday and make recommendations for future funding and reform of the system.
Where children live and the income of the households they live in, shapes their ability to live a healthy life. Now, IPPR analysis of national child measurement data published today shows that the ...
In this paper we trace the emergence of a poorly understood social challenge and one which symbolises Britain’s broken ‘social settlement’: the continued rise in working poverty since the beginning of ...
Interim executive director Harry Quilter-Pinner reacts to the Budget with Jacob Rees Mogg on GB News ...