The IEA Book Club will be hosting an upcoming event with Sir Vernon Bogdanor on his latest book, “Making The … Continue ...
Commenting on the Employment Rights Bill announced by the Government today, Professor Len Shackleton, Editorial and Research Fellow at the free market think tank, the Institute of Economic Affairs, ...
Commenting on data showing that the UK economy grew by 0.2% in August, Julian Jessop, Economics Fellow at the free market think tank, the Institute of Economic Affairs, said: “The return to growth in ...
Each year, the Government publishes international energy price comparisons. The data is sourced from the IEA and covers industrial and domestic gas and electricity prices. The latest data for 2023 was ...
Friedrich August von Hayek never formally worked for the Institute of Economic Affairs. But he was nonetheless undoubtedly one of the most significant figures in the institute’s history. If we had to ...
“It also said the UK could levy the tax without affecting most emigrants, as the top 10 wealthiest leavers each year account for 73 per cent of potential revenue…The academics argue that countries ...
The IEA Book Club will be hosting an upcoming event with Sir Tim Lankester on his latest book, “Inside Thatcher’s Monetarism Experiment: The Promise, the Failure, the Legacy”. This event will take ...
An exciting and pioneering book, it sketches out a provocative vision for cities based on civil cooperation and entrepreneurship. Historically, the city was considered a centre of commerce, knowledge ...
The IEA Book Club will be hosting an upcoming event with Nils Karlson on his latest book, “Reviving Classical Liberalism … ...
Until very recently, Britain’s National Health Service used to be beyond argument. The reverence for the health service often precluded anything resembling a rational discussion around it: the social ...
Karl Marx’s influence among intellectual elites underwent a massive rebound in recent years. In 2018, mainstream publications including the New York Times, the Economist, and the Financial Times ran ...