Synonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Synonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
Antonyms that are in the dictionary are marked in green. Antonyms that are not in the dictionary are marked in red.
According to The Resolution Foundation, the cost-of-living gap between the richest and poorest UK households is at its widest since records began in 2006.
“Britain is a stagnation nation that has struggled to secure sustained economic growth since the financial crisis,” said James Smith, research director of the Resolution Foundation.
Source: https://www.irishexaminer.com/business/economy/arid-41266678.html
Flats and smaller or overcrowded houses, especially those in cities, are most vulnerable to overheating – defined as exceeding 26C for more than 3% of occupied hours, the Resolution Foundation said.
Focus groups with UK care workers run by the Resolution Foundation think-tank found the opposite: people spoke about how much they valued the responsibility, the autonomy and the difference they made to people’s lives.
Sadly, new Resolution Foundation research finds the same can’t be said for their British peers, who still have lower incomes today than 30-somethings in pre-financial crisis Britain.
The calls came as a study by the Resolution Foundation think-tank suggested Mr Hunt may have £13billion in fiscal headroom – double the level forecast at the March Budget.
The living standards of the lowest-income households in the UK are £4,300 lower than their French equivalents, the Resolution Foundation report said.
“The poor performance on the U.K. economy in October will inevitably reignite speculation about whether the country is back in recession," said James Smith, research director at the Resolution Foundation.
Source: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/bank-of-england-ap-europe-london-british-b2463797.html
The Resolution Foundation believes that tax hikes and spiking mortgage and rent costs will wipe out any benefit to Brits from easing inflation.
“The Resolution Foundation confirmed Labour’s policy is ‘not a good idea’, with small and medium-sized businesses set to be hammered most by their cuts to skills funding.
The Resolution Foundation said the way the government had tackled the spike in inflation this year – relying heavily on the Bank of England’s interest rate rises – put “mortgage households at the heart of the Britain’s income squeeze”.
The Resolution Foundation thinktank says that by the end of the 2020s the average household will be paying £4,300 more in tax than they were in 2019.
Source: https://socialistworker.co.uk/news/tory-hunt-slashes-services-and-squeezes-workers/
The three per cent figure is taken from previous Resolution Foundation analysis.