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Policy@Manchester Articles
Expert insight, analysis and comment on key public policy issues
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The false promise of EU-US trade talks

Ferdi De VilleGabriel Siles-Brügge By Ferdi De Ville and Gabriel Siles-Brügge Filed Under: Europe, Featured Posted: December 13, 2013

On Monday the latest round of talks on the EU-US free trade agreement get underway. Gabriel Siles-Brügge and Ferdi De Ville challenge the proclaimed benefits of this much-vaunted deal. Rather than represent ‘the cheapest stimulus package you can imagine’, they argue the deal is a distraction that is unlikely to significantly boost growth. ‘This is […]

Tagged With: European trade, free trade, trade agreement, transatlantic trade, TTIP, US trade, US-EU trade

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Polling Observatory 31: No joy from the polls as festive season approaches

Rob Ford By Rob Ford Filed Under: Featured, Polling Observatory Posted: December 13, 2013

This blog post, by Dr Robert Ford, Dr Will Jennings and Dr Mark Pickup, is the thiry-first in a series that report on the state of the parties as measured by opinion polls. Manchester Policy Blogs will be posting Polling Observatory updates on a regular basis, alongside the well-established Ballots and Bullets blog. A more detailed […]

Tagged With: Conservative, GE2015, general election, Labour, Liberal Democrat, opinion polls, party politics, politics, polling, UKIP

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Tinkering around the edges; how policymakers are avoiding the big banking issues

Ian Crowther By Ian Crowther Filed Under: Featured Posted: December 12, 2013

The European Central Bank met this week to begin debating a European-wide bank crisis plan. But if we are to avoid further systemic issues in banking, it is the whole structure that needs to be addressed, argues Ian Crowther. We are in danger of learning nothing from the financial crisis, with bankers, policymakers and regulators […]

Tagged With: banking, banking regulation, Basel, CDOs, central bank, ECB, financial crisis, legislation

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Microcredit and International Development: Contexts, Achievements and Challenges

Justice Bawole By Justice Bawole Filed Under: All posts Posted: December 11, 2013

Microcredit and International Development: Contexts, Achievements and Challenges. Edited by Farhad Hossain, Christopher Rees and Tonya Knight Millar. Routledge, 2011. Microfinance services have played important roles in the development of small and medium scale enterprises, writes Dr Justice Nyigmah Bawole. This title deals with contemporary experiences in the microfinance industry – and while it omits […]

Tagged With: development, international development, MFIs, microcredit, microfinance, poverty

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Evangelising from 32,000 feet: why call for more greens to fly is wrong

Kevin Anderson By Kevin Anderson Filed Under: Featured, Science and Technology Posted: December 11, 2013

In November 2013, Brendan May wrote a piece for the Guardian’s Environment Blog on ‘Why more environmentalists should fly’. In this article, Professor Kevin Anderson, Dr Dan Calverley and Maria Sharmina respond, strongly arguing the case against having more jet-setting greens.  It was with growing dismay that we read Brendan May’s blog post, in which […]

Tagged With: 2 degrees, aviation, climate change, emissions, environmentalists, flying, global warming, green, mitigation

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Power, money, but little accountability; the rise of the New Corporate State

Stephen Wilks By Stephen Wilks Filed Under: Featured, Whitehall Watch Posted: December 9, 2013

Contracting out has become the ‘new normal’, writes Professor Stephen Wilks, with around half of all UK government spending now ending up in the pockets of private sector companies. But while public servants must operate within a robust constitutional framework, the same safeguards do not apply to the Public Services Industry. Which is the largest […]

Tagged With: accountability, corporate state, NAO, NHS, public sector, public services

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Never Letting a Good Crisis Go to Waste: George Osborne’s plans to permanently ‘roll back the state’.

Colin Talbot By Colin Talbot Filed Under: Featured, Whitehall Watch Posted: December 5, 2013

Professor Colin Talbot reflects on an Autumn statement that was really a mini-Budget – and some fine detail that hints at the Chancellor’s ultimate intentions. Much of the comment on today’s Autumn Statement by Chancellor George Osborne will focus on the specific measures he announced (there were lots) and on the short-term politics of the […]

Tagged With: autumn statement, budget, economy, OBR, osborne

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There is life beyond austerity; now give us the freedom to make it happen

Ed Cox By Ed Cox Filed Under: Featured, Westminster Watch Posted: December 3, 2013

During Manchester Policy Week, four leading thinktanks debated what government might look like beyond the General Election and towards 2020. In an abridged version of his speech at the event IPPR North’s Director, Ed Cox (pictured above, standing), says there is life beyond the current austerity measures – but only if there are significant changes to present […]

Tagged With: austerity, cuts, economy, Ed Cox, GE2015, general election, IPPR, spending

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Why the ‘radical’ post crash economics movement is missing a trick

Georgina Waylen By Georgina Waylen Filed Under: Featured Posted: December 2, 2013

The creation of a post crash economics society at the University of Manchester is being hailed as a radical new development. But is it really? Professor Georgina Waylen argues that feminist economics is currently being ignored – and yet it offers us new insights and innovative solutions. Despite its plea for a broader range of […]

Tagged With: austerity, crash, economics, feminism, feminist economics, Keynesian, Keynesianism, post crash economics, UK economy

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The Blunders of our Governments

Colin Talbot By Colin Talbot Filed Under: Featured, Whitehall Watch Posted: November 29, 2013

The Blunders of our Governments, Anthony King and Ivor Crewe.  Oneworld Publications, September 2013. This is a must read book for anyone interested in British public affairs, writes Prof Colin Talbot. It is seminal, not so much for the insight it offers – much of what it says has been said before – but in the […]

Tagged With: blunders, Civil Service, government, policy, policymaking, Whitehall

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